Goucher College - Donnybrook Fair Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)
- Class of 1914
Page 1 of 218
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 218 of the 1914 volume:
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w NORMAN T. A. MUNDER e; co. BALTIMORE DONNYBROOK FAIR gllllllllIIUIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHHIHIIIIUIIIIIIHIIIHIIUIHIITIIHIIHHIIIIIHIIHHIIHIIHIHHINHHIIIII IIIHIWHIHIIHIUHIIIHIIIHIHHII IIIHIIIIIIIHIIHIHHHWIHIIUIHIIHNHNIHlll IHHIII IlllllmHIHIIHNIHIIIHIHIXHIHIIHHHHIXHIHllWINHIHIINIHIHIIHIIIHIIHIHMW! XIWIHIXHUMXIHIMIIHHUHIIHIHIHIIE DONNYBROOK FAIR ISSUED BY THE CLASS OF NINETEEN FOURTEEN GOUCHER COLLEGE IHIUIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIUIIWINIIIIHIIIHHIIIIINJHIIIIIMIIIJIIHIHIMHrll!HUIIHIlIlIllllklIIll11IIIIIIlImIllIMIIIIMIlIIIHII IIIIIIHIHIUHIIIIIIMIIHIIIIIHMIIIlllltlflltllHLIllmllillNIIHIIIIIIIIHIMIHllllllHHlllllltllllll?IIHIIIIIIIIHIIHlllliIIHIll!IllIIHIMIUIIHIIIIIIHIHII IIIIIIIJIMIHIIHIIiIIHIIIIHIIIHIIIIMIUIIXHIIIIHIHIHIIIIIHIHIIIHHHHHIIIXIIIIHIIIIIIIHIMHHIHII XIHIHIHIIIHIHHIHHHIHIHIIIHMIHIIHII ll ll!HHI1HIXXIIHINIHII Ill HNHIII ll!ll WHIXXIIUIIIKXHIXIIH$NXXHIXIHHHIIHIXHllHUIXIIIXIIXHIXHXIIIHHHHMHIXH1HXHIHIHIIH'UIHIIHIWIHIXIII Ill llKINIllXIHllHIXXIIUIHNHI Ill HHI Ill ll!H HHIIHIIUWHIIIHH NH HIIHIHWHIIIHIIHHI HIHHI1Ill IINIHI HI Ill NH IIIHIW II III H II Ill IIIHW III HI NlllXIIIHIHHHHIIHIWIHIIILJH1XIllXllHHllXHIXxINNHIXIIIH1HIUIHIIUHIIHIHIHIHIIHIIUIW I gumIIlIIllIHIIHIIHIIIIMIIIIH IllIlIIHlll IIIIIUIHIlllIiIIHIIXIIIXlllmlllXImllllllllXXIMIJIIIIIHIIMHIIIXIIIIIHIHIllIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIHIHHIIHHHIIHIlllHlH IIIHHHIIHIHHHIHIIHIHHHHIIIXHHHIIHIIIXIHIHIIHIIHIIIHIIIXIHIIIIIHIllIIHIIHIHIHHHHIIHIllIIHIIIIH IHHIIHIIlIHlIIlIIHHIHlIHIlllllIHIIHIIHHIIIHHIH: Man was macle to grow. not stop: That help he needed once and neecls no more- Having grown but an inch bywis withdrawn. For he hath new needswand new helpsrto'these. This imports solely. man should mount on each New height in view; the help whereby 11c mountsig The ladder-rung his foot 113.5 leftwmay fall. Since all things suffer change. save Goal the Truth. Man apprehends Him newly at each stage Whereat eartlfs laclcler drOPSwits service done: And nothing shall prove twice What once was proved. fBro wnfng JOHN F. GOUCHER. D.D.. LL.D. PRESIDENT EMERITUS Advertisements ...................................... Agora ........................................... Algonquin Club ...................................... Alice in Blunderland .................................... Anatomocky ........................................ As They Would Like It . . ............................... Athletics Ullustratiom .................................. Athletic Association ............................... Ballad of Ye Great Unknown, A .............................. Basket-Ball Teams ..................................... Board of Trustees ..................................... Caused by T2 ....................................... Chemistry Class ...................................... Chronicle of the Twelve Virgins .............................. Class in R1 ........................................ College Camp Fire ..................................... College Choir ..................................... College Spirit ....................................... Copp61ia .......................................... Dedication ......................................... Distinguished Alumnae . . . . ,v .............................. Donnybrook Board-When Their Productions Went to Press ................. Donnybrook Fair .................................... Dramatics ......................................... Dream, A . ........................................ Eagles Mere ........................................ EditorialBoard .. ........................ Eight O,Clock Class, The ................................. Events of the Class of 1913 ................................ Events of the Class of 1914 ................................. Events of the Class of 1915 ................................. 11 177 185 175 177 163 144 139 162 14 171 192 174 155 185 137 Events of the Class of 1916 . . . ................ Fat, A Dirge ....... , .......... Foreword ................................. Fraternities Ullustratiom ............................... Delta Gamma ................................. Alpha Phi ...................... Tau Kappa Pi ......... . . . . .................. GammaPhiBeta.. ..... Kappa Alpha Theta ....... . . .......... PiBetaPhi.... ...... .. ...................... Delta Delta Delta . . ........... Alpha Gamma Delta . . .................. Phi Beta Kappa ................ Freshman Class Otiicers ...................... Freshman Society . . . 1 . . . . ..................... Geological Society . . . t ................................ Giene.;...... .......................... Glee Club , . A ............................. Goucher Alphabet .......................... Goucher Dictionary . . . . . . . . . ........................... Greetings from Class Presidents . , . . . . .................. Immensee ...................................... In Memoriam . , ................................. JoanofArc ....... ....................... Jokes . . ..... . . . ................................. Junior Class Officers ........................... Junior Society ..... . . ..... , . . ................. Kalends Board ................................... Mandolin Club ..................................... Mary Had A Little Cat . . . ................................ Matter of Feeling, A .............................. . ..... Members of the Class of 1913 . . . . 5 .......................... Members of the Class of 1914 ............................... Members of the Class of 1915 . . ........................... Members of the Class of 1916 ................. Midyeafs ................................. Mother Goose Rhymes ........ .......................... Musical Club allustratiom .............................. Officers of Instruction and Administration .............. Oh, What Noble Characters Are These! . . . ................... On the Day of Jubilee . t .......................... Organizations Ullustration1 . . . . . . .................... Parody, A ......................................... Pennsylvania Club . . . . .......................... Philokolai .......................... Philosophical Society .................................... 12 85 186 29 89 9O 94 98 102 106 110 114 118 122 82 127 136 176 142 195 186 171 162 73 158 180 70 125 140 146 184 176 65 71 77 83 187 174 141 25 191 187 131 185 136 135 136 Proud Aunt Association ................................. 130 Quality of Soup, The .................................... 185 Quarter Century of History, A ........................... . . . . 164 Question for T1, A ................. . . .................. 190 Re-Morse ..................................... . , . 184 Reflections from the Poets ......................... , ..... 187 Senior Class OBicers .................................... 64 Senior Class Pictures ................................... 34 Senior Class Song . . . ..... . . . . ............ , . ........... 31 Senior Committee ................. . . ................. 30 Senior Dramatics ...................................... 156 Senior Society .......................... . . . ........ 124 Session of the Faculty Gym. Class, A ...................... 1 . . . . 188 Sigma ............... . . . . ..................... , 128 Sleep ........................................... 181 Social Service League ........................ . ......... 138 Sophomore Class OBicers . . . ............................... 76 Sophomore Dramatics ................................... 160 Sophomore Society. . . ................................. 126 Southern Club ....................................... 136 Special Students ............ 1 ....................... . . . 88 Squelch Societies allustration1 ......................... '. . . . . . 123 Strange .......................................... 181 Students Organization ................................... 132 Tennis Records ...................................... 151 The Tempest ...................................... 156 Titian Tints ........................................ 129 Y W. C. A ......................................... 133 13 To ?Qang Jfruelitber, 3913. E in sincere appreciation of many helpful suggestions in this 17001: ancl his unchanging clevotion. this volume of Donnybrook Fair is respectfully declicated by the Gilagg of 1914 14 u . . ancl the foreigner shall be your ploughman anal your vinedresser . . But you receiveJ me as your friend. 15 Go softly. punster. rhymer. Wit: lay about thee with a cat of moonbeams: it is hearts thou art hitting. they are hurt easily. are sore long. never qulte recover. Come confidingly. thou reazler; swathe thy self-conceit with human sympathy; must winds cease to blow ancl frosts to nip because thou art delicate? we trow not. 16 JOHN B. VAN METER ACTING PRESIDENT 17 ELEANOR LOUISA LORD. PhD. DEAN 19 QEhituriaI 330mb A. RAY MOWBRAY BLANCHE E. ROSS EditOI-in-CIIin Business Manager WINIFRED A. BROWN A. MARGUBRITE ZOUCK Literary Editor Art Editor EDITH McDOWELL JEAN FULTON Class Editor Club Editor 20 miturial 330mb CLARINDA MATHEWS EDITH M. OSTERSTOCK Athletic Editor Jok: Editor ISABEL WOODS FLORENCE l. DAVISON Assistant Business Managcr Assistant Business Manager GRACE RIDDLE MARIAN JANNEY Assistant Literary Editor Assistant Art Editor 21 literature Dr. Hans Froelicher Dr. John F. Goucher Dr. John B. Van Meter Dr. Thaddeus P. Thomas Mr. Robert M. Gay Mrs. Arthur Barneveld Bibbins The Class Presidents 0892-191N Teresa Cohen. ,12 Harriet Eager, ,13 Mary Goode Wooldridge, 13 Hilda M. Beggs, ,14 Ruth Tingley, 14 Stanleyetta Wooledge, 14 Madge Thurlow, ,14 Edith Hanzsche, 14 Ruth Rogers, 14 Dorothy Wilson, ,14 Elizabeth Lacey, 14 Ethel Miller, 14 Matilda Sparks, 14 Delphine Lanning, ,14 Miriam Franc, 15 Johanna Stuede, ,15 Esther P. Ellinger. 15 Mr. E. C. Caswell Miss Marie Fritz Miss Margaret Haydock Ursule Guard, 10 Harriet Eager, 13 Lillian Harris Milner, ex, '14 Mildred Todd, ex, 14 Janet Wood, ex, ,14 Grace Riddle, 14 Stanleyetta Wooledge, '14 Dorothy Joesting, 15 Olive Gross, 15 Marguerite Magruder, '15 Johanna Stuede, y15 - Sylvania G. Nagle. 715 Nell Lewis, 16 Dorothy Guttmacher, y16 ?Ebe ignarh at mrugteeg SUMMERFIELD BALDWIN Presidenl HENRY S. DULANEY Vice-President LUTHER. T. WIDERMAN Recording Secretary JOHN T. STONE BENJAMIN F. BENNETT T reasurer Assistant Treasurer CLASS I Term Expires February, 1913 BISHOP EARL CRANSTON B. F. BENNETT MRS. MARIE CONNER HAYES A; ROSZEL CATHCART JOHN F. GOUCHER JAMES N. GAMBLE CLASS 111 T arm Expires February, 1915 BISHOP W. F. MCDOWELL R. TYNES SMITH ALDIS B. BROWNE CHARLES W. BALDWIN JOHN T. STONE J. M. BUCKLEY JOHN PHILIP HILL GEORGE A. SOLTER 24 CLASS II T arm Expires February, 1914 SUMMERFIELD BALDWIN LUTHER T. WIDERMAN HENRY M. WILSON BISHOP E. R. HENDRIX MRS. JESSIE LOEFFLER PALMER JOHN WESLEY BROWN CLASS IV T 67m Exfires February, 1916 BISHOP CHARLES W. SMITH HENRY S. DULANEY CHARLES E. HILL JOHN B. VAN METER JOHN A. PATTEN MRS. JANET GOUCHER MILLER C. H. RICHARDSON MRS. GEORGETTE Ross HOWARD QBffizem uf Enstrmtiun ant ghminstratiun JOHN F. GOUCHER, D. D., LL.D. President Emerims JOHN B. VAN METER A din g President. Illorgan Professor of English Bible; Philosophy. ELEANOR LOUISA LORD, PH. D. Profesxor of History. Dean. A. B., Smith College, 1887, A. M., 1890; Fellow in His- tory, Bryn Mawr College, 1888-89, 1895-96; Holder of the European Fellowship of the Woman1s Educational Association of Boston, Student in History at Newnham College, University of Cambridge, England, 1894-95; P11. D., Bryn Mawr College, 1896. WILLIAM H. HOPKINS, PH. D. Professor of Latin. A. B., and A. M., St.John1s College; Ph. D., Dickinson College. HANS FROELICHER, PH. D. Professor of German Language and Literalure and of Art Criticism. P11. D., University of Zurich, 1886. JOSEPH S. SHEFLOE, PH. D. Professor of Romania Languages. Librarian. A.B., Luther College, 1885. A.M., 1889; University Scholar and Fellow of Johns Hopkins University, 1888-90; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890; Fel- low by Courtesy, Johns Hopkins University, 1890-91. LILIAN WELSH, M. D. Professor of Physiology and Hygiene. M. D., Womaxfs Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1889. 25 THADDEUS P. THOMAS, PH. D. Professor of Economics and Sociology. Ph. 3., University of Tennessee, 1885, A. M., 1887; Fel- low in History, Vanderbilt University, 1891-92, Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1895. CHARLES C. BLACKSHEAR, PH. D. Professor of C hemistry. A.B., Mercer University, 1881; University Scholar of Johns Hopkins University, 1890; Ph. D., Johns Hop- kins University, 1890. ' WILLIAM E. KELLICOTT, PH. D. Professar of Biology. Ph. B., Ohio State University, 1898; Ph. D., Columbia University, 1904. S. N. TAYLOR, PH. D. Profexsar of Physics. Ph. B., Wesleyan University, 1887; Fellow in Physics, Clark University, 1893-96; Ph.D., Clark University, 1896; Research work in German Universities, 1902-03. CLARA LATIMER BACON, PH. D. Associaie Professor of Mathematics. A. B., Wellesley College, 1890; A. M., University of Chi- cago, 1904; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1911. QBftims at Sinstruttiun ant Qbministratiun MAY LANSFIELD KELLER, PH. D. Achz'ale Profexsar of English. A. B., Gaucher College, 1898; Graduate Student, Univer- sity of Chicago, 1900; Holder of Fellowship of Goucher College, 1901-02; Graduate Student, Universities of Berlin and Heidelberg, 1901-04; Ph. D., Heidelberg, 1904. GRACE S. WILLIAMS, PH. D. Associate P1;0fessor of Romania Languages. A. B., Knox College, 1897: Graduate Student, Columbia University, 1898-99; Sorbonne, Collage de France, Ecole des Chartes, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, 1899- 1900, 1905-06; Istituto di Studi Superiori, Florence; Rome; Madrid; 1900-01; Holder of the European Fel- lowship of the Womaxfs Educational Association of Boston, 1900-01; Elee Titulaire de 11Ec01e Pratique des Hautes. Etudes, 1901, 1905-06; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1907. ANNIE HELOISE ABEL, PH. D. Associale Profesmr 0f Hislory. A. B., Kansas State University, 1898, A. M., 1900; Manu- script Reader in English, Kansas State University, 1899-1900; Graduate Student, Cornell University, 1900- 1901; Holder of the Bulkley Fellowship in History, Yale University, 1903-04, 1904-05; Ph.D., Yale Uni- versity, 1905; Winner of the Justin Winsor Prize of the American Historical Association, 1906. ARTHUR BARNEVELD BIBBINS, PH. B. Curator. Ph. B., Albion College, 1887; Member of the Maryland Geological Survey, Member of the United States Geo- logical Survey, Fellow of the Geological Society of America and of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. JOHNETTA VAN METER, A. B. Associate Professor of German. A. B., Gaucher College, 1894; Holder of Fellowship of Goucher College. Graduate Student, Universities of Berlin and Heidelberg, 1900-01; Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1908-09. 26 ROBERT M. GAY, A. M. Associate Professor of English. A. B., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1900; A. M., Columbia University, 1901. HERMAN LOUIS EBELING, PH. D. Associate Professor of Greek, Instructor in Latin. A. B. , Johns Hopkins University, 1882; University Scholar, Johns Hopkins University, 1888-89; Fellow in Greek, Johns Hopkins University, 1889-90; Ph. D.. Johns Hop- kins University, 1891. WILLIAM H. LONGLEY, PH. D. Associate Profmsor of Botany, Instrudor in Biology. A. B., Acadia University, 1901; A. B., Yale University, 1907, A.M., 1908, Ph.D., 1910. FLORENCE PARTHENIA LEWIS, A. M3 A ssistant Professor in Mathematirs. A.B., University of Texas, 1897, A.M., 1Philosophy1, 1898; A.M., 8Mathematics1, Radcliffe College, 1906; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University, Holder of Fellowship of Baltimore Association for the Promo- tion of the University Education of Women, 1907-08. MARIE L. T. MORSE. A. B. Imz'rudor in Physics. A. B., Vassar College, 1906. ANNETTE B. HOPKINS, PH. D. Instructor in English. A. B., Goucher College, 1901; Holder of Scholarship, University of Chicago, 1908-09; Holder of the Dean Van Meter Alumna: Fellowship of Goucher College, 1909-10; Fellow in English, University of Chicago, 1910-11, Ph. D., 1912. JESSIE L. KING, PH. D. I nslrutlor in Physiology. 13.5., Earlham College, 1904; Graduate Scholar, Cornell University, 1908-10, Ph. D., 1911. 9 On leave of absence. QBftiters of Zlnstruttiun ant thinistratiun CECILIA MYRSTEN Instructor in Physiml T7aim'ng. Graduate of the Royal Central Gymnastic Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. AGNES LATIMER BACON, A. B. Imtructar in Malhematicx. A. B., Wellesley College, 1897. CAROLINE F. TUPPER, A. M. Instructor in English. A. B., Radcliffe College, 1909, A. M., 1910. HARRIET ALMIRA BLOGG Asxislant Librarian. J. W. MAGRUDER, A. B., B. D. Leciurer in Social Science. GEORGE FILBERT A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1885, D.D., 1905; Comptroller. B. D., Drew Theological Seminary, 1887. EDWARD FRANKLIN BUCHNER, PH. D. E' GRACE RUDOLPH . . b ' . Lecturer m Eduzatzon. OOkkEEPMg A. B., Leander Clark College, 1889, A. M., 1892; Ph.D., Yale University, 1893. C. BRUCE MATTHEWS Cashier. WYLLIS REDE, A. M., D. D. Ledurer in Philosophy. M A ART . A.B., Williams College, 1882, A.M., 1885; Graduate -HA M USTIN Student, Oxford University, England, 1892-93; D. D., Preszdentk 535731477- St. Johxfs College, 1895; Fellow by Courtesy, Johns Hopkins University, 1910-11. MARY R. COLBURN Stenograplzer. CARRIE MAE PROBST, A. B. Regislrar. MARY ELIZABETH BROWNE, R. N. Resident T rained Nurse. SARAH A. OSBORN A. B. 1 Graduate, Johns Hopkins Training School for Nurses, 1901. A. B., Goucher College, 1904. Laboratory Assistant in C hemistry. A. B., Goucher College, 1912. CLARA F. HANNAMAN ELEANOR P. HOPKINS, A. B. Lady in Charge, Fensal Hall. Laboratory Assistant in Physics. A. B., Gaucher College, 1912. ELLA W BYRD .. L d ' Clz ' SIGNE KALLMAN, a y m urge, VmgalfHall. Instructor in Physical T mining. SALLIE ATKINSON COLLINS Graduate of the Royal Central Gymnastic Institute, Lady in Charge, Glitner Hall. Stockholm, Sweden. 27 T is With the full appreciation of having an especial privilege, that we present to you this, the Donnyln-oo; F air, Which marks the Twenty-fifth Anniversary of Goucher College. It is a record. in some measure, of What Goucher College has achievecl in a quarter of a century. hut the hroacler. deeper influence Which she has exerted upon the lives of her more than one thousand alumnae cannot he written in any hook. It is With pride that we look upon the progress and success of our college, and al- though this setting forth of some of her achievements is imperfect, this volume W111 have clone its work if it awakens in all Who read it a greaterlove fortheir Alma Mater. 29 HE BOARD OF EDITORS gratefully acknowl- edges its indebtedness to the following committee from the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Thirteen for their work in writing the Senior verses : MARY GOODE WOOLDRIDGE, Chairman CHARLOTTE MORRIS HARRIET EAGER LAURA FULTON ELSIE STEIN The Board of Editors wishes to express its appre- ciation of the interest and co-operation of Mrs. Arthur Barneveld Bibbins, in writing the HQuarter Century of History t, presented in this book. 30 1913 Maw 5011;; Lw Sing a song to 1913. And to Gaucher College. too! Ever loyal to our class-mates And our own clear white and blue. May we e er in deeds of honor Bring thee glory from afar. May we ever heecl the guiding Of our own bright radiant star. Year By year we work together In our study and our play. Clinging closer to each other As we journey clay by day. When we ve parted at thy portals, Friends are scattered far and neare May the thought of 1913 Brighten every Jfuture year! -Mary Goocle Wooldridge 31 SENIOR CLASS MARY ELIZABETH ANDERSON Mercy, But, She Esthetic Mary Bess bought her a Steinway grand, Boom, boom, boom. Who knows, said she, when a chance Will come, Bang, bang, bang. Shels not at all nervous you understand, And, as a performer, she s quite in demand, So she has to be ready to play' m the band, Boom, boom, boom. mmabEa tLM DOROTHY LAY ARCHER Dutifully Leads Agora The name of Dotty Dimple we all know suits her well, For she is rather round of face as anyone can tell. But Dotty is a hustler, to that welll all assent, In Social work, in Agata and as class president. A j 6; FANNY FORNEY BAKER Fannyls Fearful Bashful Even her disposition goes In rubber heels and on tip toes. 1W 52W 76W 34 MARTHA HELEN BARTON Many Hefty Brains Martha Helen Bartotfs come to Goucher C-- to stay, To do her best in physics test and study hard alway. And, when we look around and see the work that she has done, We wonder how she can be gay and always such good fun. Attending to her Students, Org., she111 grab you, without doubt, And Shell beat you too in lessons-if you don1t watch out. g1 AMY LOUISA BECK A Little Beauty When to sit for her picture to Bachrach she goes, The man takes a dozen or so in qach pose. No wonder-for Amys so dainty and tair; And of brains, too, she has almost more than her share. M KW vbM-JR ' SUE ELIZABETH BE KEY K Senior's Exclusive Ba W tH-a Excoose us if ve 50111in ars, 11 Und vipe out a , Ids Berkey1s violin, She has we 0 play. 1 W w v GRACE HALLE BLONDHEIM Look where you may you always find, Grace's clouds are silver lined, For shes a chronic joker. CONSTANCE ELLA BLACKSTOCK Comely, Elusive, Bland Oh, it was Connie Blackstock Who sailed the Y. W. C. A skipper blithe and gay, my lads, Of marked rotunditee. QMW El; WM Gay Healthy Bustler ijfw XML W. KATHERINE BURGAN BOWERS Kind But Backward You must wake and call me early, Call me early, mother dear, For I must to a. foot-ball game For J. H. U. to cheer. For J. H. U. to cheer, mother, As loudly as I can ; I have a special friend, mother, A Johnny Hopkins man. LEONA CAROLINE FEICK BUCHWALD w?akltyg Xi 5 P'W a I Loyal Coach For Basket-Ball S W-Vj L041, She is worth double QZW', h' All of the trouble To label Beware! And handle with care ! VIOLA ROMANA BURT Very Reticeut-But! L G? 9 m You can most always tell when Viola is near m: For when she's around her giggle ymfll hear, ' She can speak many tongues, when shes not B afraid, -v To ?:va a pm But she's awful shy-this Italian maid. ANNIE SIGLER CARTER Ain,t She Careful? Quiet, calm and dignified, Keen and quick and full of pride, Yet bloomless bloomers, blouse to boot, USIERN 5Hom; Of her unique gymnasium suit, Make little Annie merely cute. 37 LOUISE ARTHUR CLARIDGE Love Ard1y Concealed Is it anybody's business, If a gentleman should choose To wait upon a lady, If the lady don,t refuse? Or to speak a little plainer, That the meaning all may know ; Is it anybodfs business, If a lady has a beau? FRANCES STIRLING CLARKE Feels So Conscientious Honor maintaining, Meanness disdaining, Still entertaining With something new. Somewhat romantic, Learn'd, not pedantic, Apt to get frantic, But ever true. 114 ng VJngCQv, J I SUSIE CLARKE Superb Complexion 5 S E 0 sweet Susie Clarke has come out of the west, ; For of all the good colleges, Gaucher is best; E And faithful to work from morning till dark, n Was never girl more than our Susie Clarke. 38 ELEANOR ELIZABETH COBLENTZ Eleanork Ever Cordial Y. W. C. A. is Eleanors sphere, And a right ardent worker is she. She can play the piano and e'en sing a bit, And each Friday presides at the tea. gamma 2 - Q mj ESTHER BARTON CRAMPTON Exceedingly Bumptious Cutie Esther, When old, dowt make a will, Escape 9. work so sad. Why should you make what all your life Dear lady, you have had? WW DOROTHY DAVIS Deceptively Demure This is the maiden so very demure Who is always original, you may be sure. With innocent eyes, she says something naive, But you calft be quite sure what she really believes. And you wonder if back of that name she has won Our Dorothy Dainty's just having some fun. 39 KATHRYN SEAMAN DAVISON Kitty Seeks Diversion When asked to talk of anything, Shes glad to start the topic of saving children in the slums, And duties philanthropic. K0$ nd? Liz: R.WMQW MARJORIE ANGELINE DAY Mostly Always Doing 0h, Marjorie Day, she works for us, With a great deal of vim and a bit 01 a fuss. In Glee Club she's president, and lus ' In fact, she can do just a whole 10 HILDA DEVRIES Heeds Duty You think she is buried Quite deep in her books, But ask and you'll find She,s less meek than she looks. HM 05km 40 MARY AGNES DEWEY Mild And Docile Mary'siiiitials belie her mood, For gentle and calm is she, Her eggs and milk, her early hours Cause her docility. 7km? 0 W VERA CLAYTON DUFF Valuable Class Devotee To work for 1913 Vera won,t refuse Unle s, perchance, she has a date U there at S 5e. W . EMMA LOUISE DULANEY Emphatic, Little, Dignified For such a littie lady, she has quite a grown-up air. She is always spick-and-span, and neat from heels to hair. If you think perhaps sheis docile, 'cause they call her ii Emmy Lou, Just try to lead her once-you'll Iind she won't be bossed by you! r . kaufic W7 HARRIET IDE EAGER Her Initials Enough There's so much to her, If we only knew her WEd surely profit thereby; But the best part of her Is under cover, For shew; so awfully shy. LAURA GREER EASLEY Lucie Getting's Easy To each, to all, with piteous call, Goes Laura asking for our dues. We Seniors would be near our fall, If our class treasurer we should lose. BESSIE ESTHER ECKELS Bright Earnest Eyes Bessie, ever smiling, You make us drive our cares away, Your laugh our frowns beguiling. 42 1?- K . :3 mum. 22.2; cm. $ Bessie Eckels, ever gay, ROSINA ALMA FICHT Rosy And Fair Here's to the maiden whose dimples we prize, And yet has a good brain for work, Sir. Herew to the girl with a pair of blue eyes, Who was nyer known her studies to Shirk, Sir, GLADYS FULTON Good Fun I will assure you ivs a sin For anyone to make such din, F As Gladys on her mandolin. From mom to noon, from noon to night She plays unto her heart's delight, Till we are forced to leave in fright. 9Ms W LAURA WHITE FULTON Loves Wearing Furbelows To see Miss Fulton's iiuffy waists, exaggerated hair, You'd think she had no brain at all, but really thafs not fair. Just pause-and, for a moment, deep down within her look; You' 11 find enough good qualities to almost fill a book. LOLKM Vqlm :gQK 0 NA f. MARY GOVER Much Grinding Now Gover, the good, be it well understood Is a lady of very contemplative mood. She will pore by the hour Wet a weed or a flower, Or the slugs that come crawling out after a shower. Black beetles, bumble-bees, b1ue bottle flies, And moths are of no small account to her eyes ; An industrious flea sheql by no means despise. CHARLOTTE GRAVATT Crams Greek In a class unique- She can well speak In ancient Greek. She adores new clothes, And furbelows, And neat neck-bows. MILDRED BERNICE HAMILTON Most Big Hearted In Viugolf Hall there is a girl 01' whom the world might say- A gentle dame but far too mild, Not fond enough of play.H A kind and loving heart has she To comfort friends and foes, And many a girl, with college cares For help to Bernice goes. 44 HELEN HARRISON Helps Heaps Helen, you,re so very neat, Yotfre 30 very dignified, Helen, yowd be hard to beat; You're all wool, a whole yard wide. In G14 you are quite bright ; To tell bad puns is your delight. t' I ,j r ELSA HAUPT Even Headed When everyone else is a-rushing around, With quizzes a-coming and books to be found, E1565 more quiet and cool than the rest, No wonder is it that she meets every test! BELLE REBECCA HEISSE Bright, Rollicking, Hearty Books to the right of her, Books to the left of her, But therfs some more of her. Who could deny it? Stormed at by figums bold, Vanquished them all, it's told, Into old Goucher Hall, Smiling at each and all, Hustied two hundred. A 1 w Emma. LINNIE V. HESS Looks Very Healthy How swift it comes and goes, How lovely is the rose Of Linnids cheek. ww NY. WWW JEAN THOMPSON HILES Just Terribly Hesitant Gentle voice, soft and low, Gentle tread, come and go, In the class we scarcely know If our Jeaniys with us. LILLIAN HISS Lovely Hair 9 . I Lillian smiles at you under her big blue hat, Bt t h T - 11 11 1h flt. ' u say 0 er eapot s e squec you a J Ghe. Ch. Strange, that usually merry and kind, Just two little words could so change her mind. 46 LILLIAS WILSON HOUSE Laughing, Working, Helping Tread softly- bow the head, In reverent silence bow. A tiny slam we'd say, go But-ttill some other day, Wetre scared to, now. WWWU SUSAN HOUSEKEEPER Serene Human It's Katharine Bowers, myself and no other, Arm and arm we go round at college together. I dabble in math. and politics, too, And daily spend time making chocolate stew. SUSAN BRIGGS HUNT Shets Busy Helping Shed work for Isabella Or Social Service League, She,d work for class or college And never feel fatigue. If there's some job that you want done, Susiets the girl to call upon. Wmm 47 ALICE ELIZABETH JENKINS Avoids Every Jag Here we have a little girl CNot she of famous little curD And we know that all appreciate her worth, worth, worth. Yet she scorns all fun and frolic, She is very melancholic, And we never can divert her into mirth, mirth, . , mirth. EDITH MAE J OHNSON Ever Making Jests Edith shines in biology And makes her mark in history; Shels quiet, you say. Is she always so? Well-her name is Johnnie with those who know. MADGE B. KINSLEY 0U , l I Massive But Keen , l l 0 Youth! It is the time to dream, To watch a pearl and ruby gleam. I love to laugh, but it doth seem, Sweeter by far to dream. W 48 GRACE THEODORA LEWIS Gee! Fain't Lamblike ! Sh, sh, sh! Studentsy Org. is approaching, oh gloom! And I would that my tongue could keep silent When G. T. L. enters the room. . f MARGARET TRUMBULL LOVE Many Titian Locks Margaret is seen wherever she goes, Margaret on pieces eternally sews, Margaret is heard, no matter the noise, Margaret, however, has plenty of poise. CAROLINE ETHEL MACROBERTS Chemistrfs EthePs Muse $3 Ethel is jolly and full of fun, And ready to talk with anyone, But only-after her work is done. W 81M MW 49 FRANCES MARION MANNING Forefronts Many Mannerisms Always in a bustle, Running to and fro, Are you really busy, Or do you just act so? Smear: MW WM; ALICE DU MOULIN Always Doing Math. - There was a girl in our class, E3 1 , And she was wondrous wise, 5' ' 3.' She seized upon a problem Regardless of its size. And when the task was over, Her satchel in her hand, She sauntered into Gaucher Hall- That problem had been canned! SUS VIOLA MOORE ings Very Much oman is, generally speaking -- v es, she is. 3 Yes, what? Generally speaking. , 50 CHARLOTTE FITZHUGH MORRIS Chooses Fun Mostly Shehs always here to do her part, In pleasure or in strife; But, no matter what may come, she sees The funny side of life. ngue W VIRGINIA CECILIA MORRIS Very Conscientious Maiden She comes and goes in so quiet a way, That we hardly know just what about her to say; But we know she studies and works well too, Which is more than some of the rest of us do. 7 CAROLINE BATTEE MULLIKIN Clever, Busy, Mild Incessantly sewing, Remarkably knowing, Most all the time going, She lives on the wing. 51 DREW NASH Dreadfully Nice t Behold this dreamy maiden, 1 Her eyes are fixed on space 1 Between the lines of every book She sees an absent face. Itts hard to study a musty book, When my heartts in another place. GLADYS VIRGINIA NICHOLS Gads eVery Night Work! work 1, work! While the cock is crowing aloof ! And work! work! work! Till the stars shine through the roof. It's, 0, to Be the one i: Called upon for eacK paltry task, With never a thought for the thing of renown, And ne'er a reward to ask. $15 14.3.0. K313: - A V MARIE CAMERON OHLE Modest, Charming, Over-conscientious She seems very quiet, does Marie 0, But should you ask if she's always so, Her friends will say, and her numerous beaux That she wins her way wherever she goes. ?Kzar-ti, L: U; La; 52 EMMA JOHNSON PALMER En-J'oys Painting Emma was a little girl, When first she came to college, But now that she's a Senior big, Shys wise and full of knowledgew Ah me! If we could only stay As young as we were yesterday ! 6W xix XVIRIXvM-V ' ,3 x1 ANNA LOUISE PAYNE Awfully Lovitf Person Like Jenny Morgan, She plays the organ, Inspired by the muse. Her face iW' A d her feet, $ aher dolly,s shoes. N, I EDITH PHILIPS Exceedingly Practical Beseech you get not in a stew, Nor fuss of what you have to do. Pray be calm as I am, Yowll manage somehow to skin thru. 53 FLORENCE POLK Frequently Procrastinates She takes her beauty sleep by day They say. Doth she then burn the midnight oil Instead ? To cram all nature's laws within Her head, Or doth she sleep to dream away Slow day? MARGARET CARLOTTA RISHELL Makes Cute Remarks There is a young lady, Carlotta Rishell, And some of the Freshmen think her quite a belle. She fondles them all, Both the large and the small, And seems to get on with each one pretty well. RUTH ROGERS Real Romantic And when a man is in the case, You know all other things give place. 54 CHARLOTTE IRENE ROMBERGER Community Interests Rouser Be it in siik that Charlotte goes, Or be it in humble calicoes, Therem much distinction in her clothes. EVELINA W. ROMETSCH Evades Whafs Radical Sing a song of singers, Evelina's one. When our choir leader starts, She surely makes things hum. We are so astounded at this unintended pun, That we cannot pen another word although wave scarce begunJ MABEL SCHUREMAN Most Shy What does little Squiddie say In her bed at peep of day? Let me rise, says little Squiddie, Let me hence to lab. away. Squiddie take a longer sleep, Cats in alcohol will keep. 55 MARY ARNOLD SHANKLIN Mighty Angelic Smile Oh change! stupendous change ! The eyelids ope awhile, The sun eternal breaks And Mary Arnold wakes, Wakes with a smile. 7M7 - cgmkkwm; fquw FANNY EMELINE SPENCER Fats Ever Self-controlled q k I S1165 been our class president, And worked with a will. Plays basket-ball, sings and, In facts' never still. But--mayhap Fanny knows That these jobs she can fill. th Chb FANNY W. STAUFFER Freshmen Wont Suffer She is the best seller For our Isabellabx And works mom and night, in and out of our school. Since she has been president, Each Fensal Hall residenvs Been happy and good CU under her gentle firm rule. 56 ELSIE STEIN Exceptional Savoir-faire Oh Elsie knows an awful lot, Shefs full of dignity, On every subji-rct she speaks up With much authority. In all committees that she's on She calmly speaks her say, In fact, we've heard from those who know She always wants her way. 82 7, CORNELIA FRANCES STRADER Cultivates Friendly Speech She talks in class in such an earnest way, Says funny things with such naivetf, w And when we laugh, she turns in great surprise, But we would hate to ave her otherwi . HELEN H. STREHLAU Her Hair Sparse CU H Where are you going, my pretty maid, I'am going right home, kind friend, ' she said, To make ,em a poster, 9. frock or two; Now, tell me, can I do something for you? 57 RUTH HOLLIS TANEYHILL Really Hopelessly Thin Ruth Hollis Taneyhill, so tall and slim, Goes about all her work with a push and a vim. In every class stunt, getting moneys her share- Class treasurer, Dramatics and Donnybrook Fair. Italianfs her hobby and we're sure she soon can Converse on the street with the peanuta man. i V r I v ETHEL TAYLOR Ever True Whereier she may be, in New York or right here, To Goucher and '13 eier true is this lass. And though sheis been parted from us for a year, We're glad we still have her as one of our class. Gaucher l aanv P ? 4X, GRACE ETHEL TAYLOR 0 ' h ' Goodness! Engaged Too! Grace is always dignified, Most attractive, too, beside. Weive heard thereis one who knows the place x No other girl could fill but Grace. , MARY ANTOINETTE VON WYSZECKI Maidenly and Very Winsome Mary has an awful name, Just letters in a row; A vicious habit to maintain To plague professors so. SARA PEACE WALKER Such PrimIWays Sara, Walker Is some talker, Though she's demure and shy. To strangers cold, Perhaps you,re told -- But with her friends-O my ! Sm C3. WMLW LILLIAN ALBERT WARD Little Athletic Woman Oh, children, you must never tease Our Wardic-it is awful! Shvs indispensable to us, And that is quite a jawful. 59 mg ; Awmgy ZANA WESTERMAN Zounds ! Witty ! If seven maids with seven jokes Should tell the same all year, Do you suppose it would be worse Than Zanals are to hear? ll I doubt it, said the Glituer girls, And shed a bitter tear. iii IslinI-A ' ii Falmul OQLM x50 9W EMMA E. WEYFORTH Elocutes Everything Well She elocutes everything eloquently, No matter what the selection may be ; A limerick, a psalm, recitation or ,phone- She elocutes all in the same tragic tone. MARGARETTA ANDREWS WILLIAMSON Modest, Able Worker Can it possibly be that she's too conscientious, And makes out of nothing a matter portentious? Perhaps-but then what if that should be true? She is bright, she is pretty and lovable, too. MARY WILSON $ Hl$ 'Most Wed 1,11 tell you a story, perhaps told before; Young love likes to knock at a. pretty girFs door. So he called you Mary a Junior at college, Shem come to his summons, when through getting knowledge. MARY GOODE WOOLDRIDGE Makes Good Worker We know her voice and know her walk, Well can she sing, and well can talk; She bosses us around, 'tis true, But what she says shell do, shall do. . 39-942. Wmctka GRACE ALTONA VEAKEL Going Across to Yapan Our class-mate here,s so very good, A missionary maid ; But it,s a shame, she,11 squelch you, too- Her haixds of Titian shade. To go to teach the heathen Has been our Grace's choice, And should she hap to sing to them She'll charm them with her voice. . I -. . . 0 4' 61 MISS CAROLINE F. TUPPER 62 MR. R. TYNES SMITH 63 9H3 MOTTO COLORS Ease quam videri Blue and White OFFICERS HELEN HARRISON President FRANCES STRADER Vice-President VERA DUFF Recording Secretary BERNICE HAMILTON Corresponding Secretary LAURA EASLEY Treasurer MARY GOODE WOOLDRIDGE MARGARET LOVE Sergeants-at-Arms 64 5 $ members at the Qtlags at 1913 ANDERSON, MARY E. . ARCHER, DOROTHY L. BAKER, FANNY F. BARTON, M. HELEN . . BECK, AMY L. . BERKEY, SUE E. . BLACKSTOCK, CONSTANCE E. . BLONDHEIM, GRACE H. . BOWERS, KATHERINE B. . BUCHWALD. LEONA C. F. . BURT, VIOLA . CARTER, ANNIE S. . CLARIDGE, LOUISE A. . CLARKE, FRANCES S. . CLARKE, SUSIE . . COBLENTZ, ELEANOR E. . CRAMPTON, ESTHER B. . DAVIS, DOROTHY . . DAVISON, KATHRYN S. . . DAY, MARJORIE A. . DEVRIES, HILDA . . DEWEY, MARY A. . DUFF, VERA C. . DULANEY, E. LOUISE . DU MOULIN, ALICE . EAGER, HARRIET I. . EASLEY, LAURA G. . ECKELS, BESSIE E. . FIGHT, ROSINA A. . FULTON, GLADYS . FULTON, LAURA W. . GOVER, MARY . . GRAVATT CHARLOTTE V. HAMILTON, M. BERNICE . HARRISON, HELEN . HAUPT, ELSA C. . HEISSE, BELLE R. . HESS, LINNIE V. . HILES, JEAN T. . HISS, LILLIAN . HOUSE, LILIAS . . HOUSEKEEPER, SUSAN J. HUNT, SUSAN B. . JENKINS, ALICE E. . . Marion and Alexander Aves., Clifton, Cincinnati, Ohio . 124 Lincoln Ave., Newark, N. J. . 23 E. let St, Baltimore, Md. . 2101 Woodberry Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 2422 N. Ca1vertSt., Baltimore, Md. . Somerset, Pa. ............Barei11y,India . 714 Newington Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 530 E. let St., Baltimore, Md. . 300 N. Calhoun St, Baltimore, Md. .,Buffalo N. Y. .Denton, Md. .1814 N. Broadway. Baltimore, Md. . 620 Piedmont Ave. Atlanta, Ga. . . ..She1don,I11inois . 410 N. Calhoun St.Ba1timore, Md. . 1933 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. . 35 E. 25th St.,Ba1timore,Md. Hightstown, N J. .4 James St., Auburn, N. Y. . 3261 Chestnut Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 467 McDonogh St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . Newport, Del. . Charles St. and Forest Aves., Baltimore, Md. 1110 W. Mulberry St., Baltimore, Md. . 602 Edgevale Road, Roland Park, Md. .Snow Hi11,Md. .311 Tenth St. Wellsville, Ohio . 719 Dolphin St., Baltimore, Md. . 1919 Park Ave., BaItimore, Md. 2211 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. . 600 N. Carrollton Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 309 S. Sixth St., Camden, N. J. .878 S. 17th St, Newark, N. J. . 451 E. 22nd St.Ba1timore, Md. .Jessups, Md. .417 Augusta Ave. , Baltimore, Md. . 400 N. Front St., Steelton, Pa. . . 32 Market St., Salem, N. J. . 2017 Bolton Street, Baltimore, Md. . 1214 17th Ave. 8., Nashville, Tenn. . 1114 N. Eutaw St., Baltimore, Md. .,C1yde N. Y. .1513 Lafayette St., Scranton Pa. 65 JOHNSON, EDITH M. . . KINSLEY, MARGARET B. . . LEWIS, GRACE T. . . . LOVE, MARGARET T. . . MACROBERTS, C. ETHEL . . . MANNING, F. MARION . . MOORE, SUSAN V. . . MORRIS, VIRGINIA C. . . . . MORRIS, CHARLOTTE F. . . . MULLIKIN, CAROLINE . . . NASH, J. DREW . . . NICHOLS, GLADYS V. . . . OHLE, MARIE C. . . PALMER, EMMA J. . . PAYNE, ANNA L. . . PHILLIPS, EDITH . . POLK, FLORENCE. . . RISHELL, M. CARLOTTA . . . ROGERS, RUTH . ROMBERGER, CHARLOTTE 1.. . . ROMETSCH, EVELINA W. . . SCHUREMAN, MABEL L. . . . SHANKLIN, MARY A. . . . SPENCER, FANNY E. . . . STAUFFER, FANNY W. . . STEIN, ELSIE . . STRADER, C. FRANCES . . . STREHLAU, HELEN H. TANEYHILL, RUTH H. . . . TAYLOR, GRACE E. . . . TAYLOR, ETHEL C. . . . VON WYSZECKI, MARY A. WALKER, SARA P. . . WARD, LILLIAN A. WESTERMAN ZANA . . WEYFORTH, EMMA E WILLIAMSON, MARGARETTA A WILSON, MARY . . WOOLDRIDGE, MARY G. YEAKEL, GRACE A. . . MR. R. TYNES SMITH . . MISS CAROLINE A. TUPPER . . . 1509 N. 20th St., Philadelphia. Pa. . 725 N. 63rd St, Philadelphia, Pa. . 223 S. 2nd Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . 130 Douglas Ave., Lonaconing, Md. .Govans, Md. 1339 W. Mosher St, Baltimore Md. . .Conneaut Ohio 2.04N Gilinor St., Baltimore, Md. . 2204 Maryland Ave., Baltimore, Md. .611 W. North Ave., Baltimore, Md. . . 1331 Eighth St. N. W., Washington, D. C. . 40 Washington Terrace, East Orange, N. J. . 1203 W. Fayette St., Baltimore, Md. . 419 S. Walnut St, West Chester, Pa. .Liberty, N. Y. .Cedarcroft School, Kennett Square, Pa. .Millersburg, Pa. Windber Pa. .37 N. 4th Ave. , Royersford, Pa. .Middletown, Pa. .210 Pelham Road, Germantown, Pa. .,Saybrook Ill. Middletown, Conn. .2106 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. . .Leola, Pa. 1.323 Eutaw P1ace,Ba1timore, Md. .115 Manly St., Greenville, S. C. 117 E. 24th St., Baltimore, Md. . 1103 Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 1009 Lake Ave., Detroit, Mich. . . .Newark, N J. . 2124 N.Fu1ton Ave , Baltimore, Md. . 909 N. Arlington Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 4210 Maine Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 228 S. 4th St., Columbia, Pa. . 2329 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 1031 Park Road, Washington, D. C. . 1431 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore, Md. 1709 Park Place, Baltimore, Md. . 1636 N. Calvert St, Baltimore, Md. HONORARY MEMBERS . Roland Ave., Roland Park, Md. . Baltimore, Md. 66 QEhents of the 611155 of FRESHMAN YEAR Entered College . 1 . Y. W. C. A. Reception . . Hazing Party given by 1912 . . . , . . Election of Chairman, Mary Weber . . . . . . Senior Tea . Tea given by 1912 . Tennis Tournament 1912 v5.1913 iLosO. . Election of Honorary Member, Mr. R. Tynes Smith Election of President, Mary W'eber . Basket-Ball Game. 1912 vs. 1913 iWorO Championship Game, 1910 vs. 1913 iLosD Entertainment by 1911 . . . . . Freshman-Junior Boat-ride Lantern Chain . SOPHOMORE YEAR Election of President, Dorothy Archer Entertainment to 1914 . . Presentation of Sophy More to 1914 . Tennis Tournament 1913 vs 1914 iWoxD Sophomore Class Entertainment . Basket- Ball Game, 1913 vs.1914 iWorO Championship Basket- Ball Game, 1913 vs 1911 iLosO . 1913 to 1911, The Foresters JUNIOR YEAR Election of President, Fanny Spencer Basket-Ball Game, 1912 vs. 1913 CWOM Championship Game, 1915 vs. 1913 iLOSD 1913 to 1915,141nnnensee11 . Junior Banquet, 1913 to 1912 SENIOR YEAR Election of President, Helen Harrison . Senior Tea to 1916 Basket- Ball Game, 1913 v5.1914 iWoni Championship Game, 1913 V5. 1915 CLOSO 67 1913 . Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Jan. Jan. Jan. . Jan. Feb. May May Oct. Oct. Oct. . Oct. . Nov. Dec. Jan. May Oct. Jan. . . Jan. . Mar. Apl. Oct. . Oct. . Dec. Dec. 1909 1909 1909 1909 1909 1909 1909 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1910 1911 1911 1911 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 69 'uww- f5- ..u 4 1 AN uMAMZr, Q1? .JMMA... f; I s. Vim; VI v'vy'lM Y; i, Y ,yfnnr I 2 E 7b ; MOTTO COLORS Non prodredi est regredi Red and White OFFICERS HILDA BEGGS President ELIZABETH MASON Vice-President ELIZABETH LACEY .Recording Secretary STANLEYETTA WOOLEDGE Corresponding Secretary RUTH ANDERSON Treasurer MARION EVANS CLARINDA MATHEWS Sergeants-at-Arms 83'? 70 1012th13 of the mass of 1914 ANDERSON, RUTH . . . . . . Alexander and Marion Aves., Clifton, Cincinnati, Ohio ANNAN, ELINOR S.. . . . . . . . . . . . .115 S. SixthSt.,C1arksburg,W.Va. BALDWIN, FLORENCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 462 Franklin St., Elmira, N Y. BEGGS, HILDA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .University Park, Colorado BROWN, WINIFRED . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Elmwood Place, Bridgeport, Conn. BOBLITZ, KATHERINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .210912thStuWalbrook Md. BUSWELL, MARGARET . . . . . . . . . . .Lewistown, Minn. CANOLES, ERVA M. . . . . . . . . . . 728 Wyndhurst Ave. Roland Park, Md. DALE, M. ETHEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208 N. Alleghany St., Bellefonte, Pa. DAVIS, NELLIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2900 Parkwood Ave., Baltimore, Md. DAVISON,FLORENCE I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hightstown, N.J. DICKEY, ANNA M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Barclay St., Youngstown, Ohio EVANS, MARION L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 539 N. Luzerne St., Baltimore, Md. FENDERICH, ELIZABETH. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ben Avon,Pa. FITZPATRICK, ISABEL . . . . . . . . . . . . 2419 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. FULTON, JEAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1919 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. GROSSCUP,ETHELA......................Wen0nah,N.J. HANZSCHE, EDYTHE B. . . . . . . . . . 1323 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore. Md. HIER, ALEDA M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 208 N. Mulberry St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio HOOPER.JANE W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218 E. 20th St.,Baltimore, Md. HOPPE, MARGUERITE . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 Bolton St., East, Savannah, Ga. JANNEV, MARION . . . . . . . . . . . . .2109 Homewood Ave.Ba1timore,Md. KEEVER, HELEN. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Macksburg, Ohio KENNELLEY, MIRIAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207N. Hanover St., Carlisle, Pa. KING, HESTER L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1425 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. LACEY,ELIZABETH . . . . . . . . . . . . 300 E. 17th St., Cheyenne,Wyo. LANNING, DELPHINE A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Millstone, N.J. LONG, ELIZABETH . . . . . . . . . . . . 285 Ridgewood Ave.,G1en Ridge, N. J. MCCOSH,GENEVIEVE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .St. Louis, Mo. MCDOWELL, EDITH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2541 St. PaulSt., Baltimore, Md. MACROBERTS, MARGARET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Govans, Md. MANDELSTAMM, FRIEDA . . . . , . . . . . . 1403 McCulloh St., Baltimore, Md. MARTSOLF, MARGARET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . New Brighton, Pa. MASON, ELIZABETH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 919 Raynor Ave. Joliet, Ill. MASON, SARAH G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2306 Guilford Ave., Baltimore, Md. MATHEWS, CLARINDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2710 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. MEID, LENORE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2936 Harford Road, Baltimore, Md. MILLER, ETHEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1702 Penn Ave. , Scranton, Pa. MOWBRAY, A. RAY. . . . . . . .1322W. Lexington St., Baltimore, Md. MURRAY, CLARA. . . . . Charles St. Ave. and University Parkway,Ba1timore, Md. OSTERSTOCK, EDITH M.. . . . . . . . . . . .-1435 Washington St., Easton, Pa. OWENS, ALICE G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Heck Ave., Ocean Grove, N. J. PECK, HELEN W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hamilton P. 0., Md. REID, MARION A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , 41 N. 9th St.,Lebanon,Pa. 71 RIDDLE,GRACE......................... Baldwin,Md. ROCKWELL, ISABEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Canton, Pa. ROE, IRENE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . R F. D., Cordova, Md. ROGERS, RUTH W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2313 N Charles St., Baltimore, Md. ROSS, BLANCHE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2304 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. ROTHHOLZ, EDNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2108 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. SAWYER, MARGERY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155 Ridge St., Glens Falls, N. Y. SCHWARTZ, EDNA F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 520 N. FultonAve.,Ba1timore, Md. SHAWKEY,FLORENCE B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Warren,Pa. SINCLAIR, CAROLINE. . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 8. Chester St., Baltimore, Md. SINDLER, BESSIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1804 E.Ba1timore St., Baltimore, Md. SPARKS,MATILDA . . . . . .. .......... . . . . . .Colgate,Md. SMITH,HAZEL.........................Chrisman,Ill. SPICKNALL, ELINOR . . . . . . . . . . . . 2112 E. Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md. STONE, PHEBE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Kinkiang, China STROUSE, MIRIAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . .400 Forest Road Roland Park, Md. THURLOW, MADGE. . . . . . . . . . . . . .5355 Webster St., Philadelphia, Pa. TINGLEY, RUTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2225 Linden Ave.,Ba1timore, Md. UPHAM, FANNIE W. . . . . . . . . . . . . .1135 Ditmas Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. WILSON, DOROTHY . . . . . . . . . . . .1431 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore, Md. WINN, HARRIET . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.19N 24th St., Clayton. Ala. WOODS, ISABEL . . . . . . . . . .Earleigh Heights, Anne Arundel Co , Md. WOOLEDGE, STANLEYETTA M. . . . . . . . 53 Greenwich Ave., Greenwich, Conn. ZOUCK, A. MARGUERITE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Reisterstown, Md. HONORARY MEMBER HANS FROELICHER, Ph.D. . . . . . . . . . . . .N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 72 3m Inning memory OF OUR FRIEND AND CLASSMATE LUCY PEARL CRAWFORD MAY 2, 1893 OCTOBER 23. 1912 73 QEhmts of the 41211155 of 1914 FRESHMAN YEAR Entered College . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sept. 26, 1910 Election of Chairman,Isabe1 Fitz- Patrick . . . . . . . . . . Sept. 30, 1910 Y. W. C. A. Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sept. 30, 1910 Entertainment by 1913 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oct. 3, 1910 Senior Tea . . . . . . . . . . . . Oct. 8, 1910 Tennis Tournament 1913 vs.1914 iLostJ. . . . . . . . . . Oct. 29, 1910 Election of Honorary Member, Dr. Froelicher . . . . . . . . . Nov. 8, 1910 Basket-Ball Game, 1913 vs. 1914 1L050 . . . . . . . . . . . . Dec. 15, 1910 Election of President, Isabel FitbPatrick . . , . . . . . . . . Jan. 16, 1910 Class Party . . . . . . . . . . Feb. 3, 1911 1912 to 1914, HThe Wedding of Mitsu- Y.u- NissiH . . . . . . . Feb. 17, 1911 Freshman- -Juni0r Boat- ride . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 13, 1911 Lantern Chain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . June 1,1911 SOPHOMORE YEAR Election of President, Edith Osterstock . . . . . . . . . . . . Oct. 6, 1911 Entertainment to 1915 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oct. 2, 1911 Presentation of Sophy More to 1915 . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oct. 7, 1911 'lennis Tournament, 1914 vs.1915 1L050 . . . . . . . . . . . Nov. 4, 1911 Basket-Ball Game, 1914 vs. 1915 1L050 . . . . . . . . . . . . Dec. 15, 1911 1914 to 1912,11As They Would Like 1W . . . . . . . . . . . May 4, 1912 JUNIOR YEAR Election of President, Hilda Beggs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Oct. 5, 1912 Basket-Ball Game, 1913 V5. 1914 iLOSD . . . . . . . . . . . . Dec. 10, 1912 1914 to 1916 HCinderella in Flowerland . . . . . . . . . . . March 7, 1913 74 KKK AW K 75 - ESE , MOTTO COLORS Ad aura per aspera Green and White OFFICERS ETHEL CHAMBERLIN President MARY E. PHILLIPS Vice-President LOUISE F. LACEY Recording Secretary GEORGIA ROWE Corresponding Secretary ELEANOR DIGGS Treasurer NR 13$ $ $5 WJJ xXx ' HyN ETHEL MCKNIGHT VIRGINIA MERRITT Sergeants-at-Arms :4 I '9 76 members ADAMS, INEZ P. ARNOLD, EDNA W. BARTON, VOLA P. . BECK, EDITH A. BELT, GEORGIA BERRY, DOROTHY . BLACK, ETHALINDA BOGLE, BARBARA . BRANSKY, BESSIE BULLARD, MARION BURGUNDER, CORINNE CHAMBERLIN, ETHEL . CHAPMAN, JOSEPHINE . CONNET, HELENE . . CRAWFORD, ELIZABETH . DAVIS, EMILY H. DEHLER, LILLIAN . DIGGS, CAROLINE DIGGS, ELEANOR DRUMMOND, MARY I. ELDRIDGE, ALICE . ELLINGER, ESTHER . . FITZ-SIMMONS, LOUISA . FRANC, MIRIAM A. FRISCH, HELEN S. . . . FRYER, VIOLETTE H. . GAMBRILL, CARRIE R. . GANTT, SUE E. . . GREENSFELDER, RUTH GROSS, OLIVE A. HARN, E. MURIEL . HASLUP, NORMA V. . HAYDEN. RUTH . HAYMAKER, GRACE HEISSE, HESTER R. . HOFFMAN, MARY . HOLMES, MAY. . . . JOESTING, DOROTHY . . KRAUS, ELSA B. LAcEv, LOUISE F. LAVENSON, EDNA . LIBERLES, LUCILE . LIM, KATHERINE O. LOVETT. J. ELIZABETH MCKNIGHT, ETHEL M. . MAGRUDER, MARGUERITE . MARQUIS, KATHARYN MARTIN, EVELYN H. . MARTIN. MARY E. . MAXWELL, ESTHER . MELCHING, PAULINE MERRITT, VIRGINIA at the Mass at 1915 . . . 215 Shawnee St., Hiawatha, Kan. . 2053 Woodberry Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 2101 Woodberry Ave., Baltimore, Md. . . Lutherville Md. N. E., Washington, D. C. . Martinsburg, W. Va. .2125 Denison St.,Wa1brook Md. . . Whiteriver Junction, Vt. . 2648 Wilkins Ave. Baltimore, Md. .237 Glen St.,G1ens Falls, N. Y. 2228 Linden Ave. , Baltimore, Md. East Palestine, Ohio ...... ..Towson,Md. . . 727 Reservoir St., Baltimore, Md. . 2130 Brookfield Ave., Baltimore, Md. . . Ten Hills Baltimore, Md. .725 E Twenty Second St, Baltimore, Md. .318 Woodlawn Road Roland Park, Md. . 318 Woodlawn Road, Roland Park, Md. 5305 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. . 1419 Chapin St., N. W., Washington, D. C. . . 36 W. 25th St.. Baltimore, Md. 131 Tradd St., Charleston, S. C. .1946 Calvert St., Washington D. C. .314 Woodlawn Road, Roland Park Md. X140 13.61., . Colora, Md. .Ellicott City, Md. . . Millersville, Md. . 1811 Eiitaw P1ace,Baltimore, Md. . . . 916 E. North Ave , Baltimore, Md. . 2700 Huntingdon Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 1916 Kennedy Ave., Baltimore, Md. . Catonsville, Md. . . 244 E. Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va. . 1409 W. Lombard'St., Baltimore, Md. . . . 2417 Madison Ave, Baltimore, Md. . . 515 W. Mulberry St., Baltimore, Md. . 514 Chestnut Hill Ave., Baltimore, Md. . . . . 2338 Eutaw Place,Ba1tin10re, Md. . 300 E. Seventeenth St., Cheyenne, Wyo. . 940 N. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. H Leodalef, West Arlington, Md. . 86 Martin Place, Franklin,1nd. Little Silver, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Baltimore Md. . Lisbo11,0hio . . .Mt. Washington, Md. .740 Dolphin St.,Ba1timore,Md. . . . .,Rising Sun, Md. . . . . 431 N. Newberry St., York Pa. . 3402 VV.NorthAve.Ba1timore Md. 4842 Wahiut St. . 2528 N.Ca1vert St., 77 MILLER, MARION G.. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Coatesvi11e Pa. MITCHELL, ANGELA. . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . .1900Cec11AveBa1tin1ore Md. MORRIS, GRACE E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364 Spruce St., Steelton, Pa. MOSES, BESSIE. . . . . . . . . . . . . .4003 Fernh111 Ave Baltimore, Md. MULLIKIN ANNA M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 611 W NorthAve,Ba1timore, Md. MUNDING, GERMAINE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 Morley St., Baltimore, Md. NAGLE. SYLVANIA. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.732 N.Ca1vertSt., Baltimore, Md. NASON, ALICE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Roaring Spring,Pa. NASON, MARJORIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Roaring Spring, Pa. NICHOLLS, LOTTIE L. . . . . . . . . . .351 E Main St., Spartanburg, S C. OWLETT, CORA W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wellsboro, Pa. PATTEN, MARY W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2033 Park Ave. Baltimore, Md. PHILLIPS, MARY E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 8205 17th Ave. Nashville, Tenn. PORTER, GERTRUDE . . . . . . . . . . . . 1505 Mondawmin Ave., Clinton, Ky. REINEKE, EDNA K. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1913 Patterson Place, Baltimore. Md. RICHARDSON,MARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Phoenix.Md. ROBINSON, MARGARET . . . . . . . . . . . 177 W. Pike St., Clarksburg,W.Va. ROE,HELEN...........................Dent0n,Md. ROWE, GEORGIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2321 N. Ca1vertSt., Baltimore, Md. RUHL, REBECCA L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205 E. Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va. SHAROGRODSKY, REBECCA . . . . . . . . . . 922 E.MadisonSt.,Ba1timore,Md. SINGER, BEULAH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 Pleasant St., Worcester, Mass. SINGEWALD, EDNA M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 W. 29th St., Baltimore, Md. SMITH. CATHERINE J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1713 Hollins St., Baltimore, Md. SMITH, HELEN L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .616 Walnut St., Hollidaysburg, Pa. STEARNS, CORINNE. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Freder1cksburg,Va. STOCKING.BESSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ...Burton, Ohio STUDE,JOHANNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Beaumont,Ave., Catonsville, Md. TAYLOR,GEORGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Demopolis,Ala. THRUSTON, AUGUSTA . . . . . . . . . . . . 2306 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. VANDEVER, ETHEL . . . . . . . . . . . .2013 Van Buren St., Wilmington, Del. VINACKE, ELLA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540 E. First Ave., Denver, Colo. VOLLMER, GRACE M. . . . . . . . Pelham Ave., Belle Harbor, Long Island. N. Y. VON BORRIES, ELINE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2100 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. WATSON, ALICEW. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Landon St., Pittston, Pa. WELSH, HELEN DOROTHY . . . . . . . . . . . 721 Reservoir St., Baltimore, Md. WHITEHURST ANNA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1902 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. WHYEL, FRANCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 E. Fayette St., Uniontown, Pa. WILCOX, JEAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 E. 25th St., Baltimore, Md. WINGERT, MARJORIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 608 N. Dixon Ave., Dixon, Ill. WRIGHTSON, RUTH F. . . . . . . . . . . . 1373 N. Stricker St., Baltimore, Md. HONORARY MEMBER MR. ROBERT M. GAY . . . . . . . . . . . . 2426Gui1ford Ave., Baltimore, Md. 78 4311mm of the 41215155 at 1915 FRESHMAN YEAR Entered College . . . . . . . Election of Chairman Marion Btillard . . . Y. W. C. A. Reception . . Entertainment by 1914 . . Senior Tea . . . . Tennis Tournament,1914 vs. 1915 1Won1 Election of Honorary Member, Mr. R. M. Gay Basket-Ball Game, 1914 vs. 1915 1Won9 Championship Game, 1913 vs. 1915 1Won9 . . Election of President, Marion Bullard 1913 to 1915, iiImmenseeH Freshman-Junior Boat-ride Lantern Chain . . SOPHOMORE YEAR Election of President,Ethe1 Chamberlin Entertainment to 1916 . Presentation of Sophy More to 1916 Tennis Tournment, 1915 vs. 1916 1Won9 . . Basket-Ball Game, 1915 vs. 1916 1Won9 HCoppc'zlia,H for the Goucher Fund . . . Championship Game, 1913 vs. 1915 1Won1 . . 79 . Sept. 25, . Sept. 30, . Sept. 30, Oct. 2, Oct. 7, . Nov. 4, . . Nov. 4, . Dec. 15, Jan. 16, Jan. 6, . Mar. 1, May 4, May 26, Oct. 5, . Sept. 30, Oct. 5, . Nov. 2, Dec. 5, Dec. 13, . Dec. 17, 1911 1911 1911 1911 1911 1911 1911 1911 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 81 ,4 r I x x: L 9X6 D MOTTO COLORS Keep step! Yellow and White OFFICERS NELL LEWIS President KATHARYN CHISM Vice-President IRENE FRIZ Recording Secretary HELEN LEWIS Corresponding Secretary MIRIAM UHLER Treasurer ELIZABETH BERRY MAYBELL BURNER Sergeants-at-Arms 82 Members; of the $11155 at 1916 AMISS, RUTH . . ATWOOD, HELEN . . AYER, CONSTANCE . BACHMAN, VALERIA . BENDER, ELSIE L. . . BENSON, LILLIAN E. BERRY, MARY E BLACKBURN, REBECCA M BOLLINGER, INEZ . BROWN, SOPHIE R. . BRYANT, FRANCIS D. . BULLOCK, HELEN C. BURNER, MAYBELL J. . CAMERON, LESLIE G. . CHISM KATHARYN . CLEAVELAND, MARGUERITE C. COLT, MARY . . . . Cox, THEODOSIA . . CURLEY, HELEN R. . DAVY, MARY W. . . DENNY, MARY E. . . . DINSMORE, EMMA A. . DOETSCH, HELENE . . . DONALDSON, KATHERINE . . DYE, HELEN R. EISENBRANDT, E. MARIE . . EISENBRANDT, JEANNETTE E. . ELLINGER, MARGARET . . Foo'rE, AGNES W. . FRANTZ, HELEN K. . . FRIZ, IRENE M. . GEBHARDT, ELIZABETH M GILPIN, LYDIA . . GRAFF, MARY H. GUTTMACHER, DOROTHY E. HAMILTON, MARY B. . . HARDING, DOROTHY . HESTER, RUTH L. HIER, RUTH . HODSHON, MILDRED I HOOD, AGNES F HOUCK, HELEN R. . HULSARD, ESTHER . . JEFFERS, CATHERINE E. . . JENNISON, KATHLEEN B. JOHNSON, RUTH JONES, MILDRED A. JOSSELYN, ELLA G. . . KEMPER, HELEN E. . KEMPER, MARIAN M. . . KINARD, GRACE K. KLEIN, ERNESTINE . . 1455 Girard St., Washington, D. C. . 2809 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. . 1024 Harrison St., Topeka, Kan. . 1521 Hanover St., Baltimore, Md. ............Re1ay,Md. . 3608 Roland Ave., Baltimore Md. . Jacksonville, Fla. .407 Lorraine Ave. , Baltimore, Md. .309 N Lime St., Lancaster, Pa. . 121 8. Fourth St., Easton, Pa. . 425 Lebanon St., Melrose, Mass. . . . Canton, Pa. 2201 Orem Ave., Baltimore, Md. . .1800 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. . 2201 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. . . 113 N. Broadway. Baltimore, Md. . 1007 N. Caroline St., Baltimore, Md. . . . Charlestown, W. Va. .733 E.215t St., Baltimore, Md. . Upper Fairmount, Md. California Pa. . .232 S. Patterson Park AV6.,Ba1timore,Md. 733 W. Lombard St., Baltimore, Md. . . Gittings Ave., Govans, Md. . 236 Amber St., Pittsburgh, Pa. . 2205 Avalon Ave., Baltimore, Md. . Rogers Ave., Mt. Washington, Md. . . . 36 W. 25th St., Baltimore, Md. . 6 Boulder Lane, Roland Park. Md. . . 381 Carey Ave., Wilkesbarre, Pa. . 406 McMechen St., Baltimore, Md. . 1128 W. Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md. .South Sterling, Wayne Co., Pa. . 1222 Hamilton B1.,Peoria,Ill. 2239 Brookfield Ave. , Baltimore, Md. 3812 Roland Ave. , Baltimore, Md. . 600 Arlington Ave., Govans, Md. 1453 Washington St., Easton, Pa. . 208 W. Mulberry St., Mt. Vernon, Ohio . . . . . . . . . . Catonsville, Md. . 628 W. Main St., Clarksburg, W. Va. . 1851 W. North Ave., Baltimore, Md. . . . 143 S. Monroe St., Dover, N. J. . 108 N. Front St., Wheeling, W. Va. . . 406 Farragut St., Bay City, Mich. , 1623 Q St., University Place, Neb. . 1502 W. Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md. . . 604 N. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. . 3568 Dayton Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. . 2305 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. .... . . . . ..Leacock,Pa. . 311 Fillmore St., Topeka, Kan. 83 KRAMER, RUTH A. . LAMBERT, MARY L. LAWTON, ELNORA M. LEE, MARY H. . . LEWIS, HELEN W. . LEWIS, NELL B. . LEYBURN, NELLIE C. LOEB CARRIE. . LONGFELLOW MILDRED LOWRIE, SARA F. MARKS, ELIZABETH S. MEEK, JOSEPHINE L. . MILLER, EVELYN G. MINDS, ETHEL L. . . NETTING, LENORE E. . NORRIS, HELEN M. . PAGE, FRANCES . . . PECK, HELEN V. . . PERHAM, HELEN L. . PEYTON, SARA M. PRETTYMAN, MARIAN L. . PROBST, GLA.DYS PROBST, MILDRED . REDMOND, ANNA K. RILEY, KATHERINE ROBINSON, MATILDA RODDY, ANNA M. . . ROEDER, JULIA D. . . ROGERS, MILDRED . SABELSON, AGNES SAPP, MARGARET I. SCOFIELD, GERTRUDE . SHEKELLS, GENEVIEVE . SISSON, MARGARET . SPANOGLE, MARY A. . SPEDDY, FAITH S. SNIDER, VIRGINIA A. . STYER, ALICE M. SUTTON, MARY E. . UHLER, MIRIAM D. . WADDELL, INA WAGNER, CLARA A. WARING, LILLIAN D. . WEBER, MARY D. . . WESTCOTT, PENELOPE . W'HALEN, NAOMI C. . WINDER, PAMELIA VVOLF, BEULAH P. . Y EAKEL, IVY V. YOUNG, MARY E. . ZOUCK, ADA E. . . 319 E. Twenty-Fifth St,, Baltimore, Md. . 1627 N. Fulton Ave., Baltimore, Md. . 229 N. Carey St., Baltimore, Md. . . 1763 Williams St, Denver, Colo. . 825 Columbia Ave., Millville, N. J. . 5 W. Hargett St., Raleigh, N. C. ......... . .Manassas,Va. . . 221 Clayton St., Montgomery, Ala. . 120 Belvedere Ave., Arlington, Md. . 861 Washington Ave., Tyrone, Pa. . . . . . . . . . Philipsburg, Pa. . 435 S. 13th St., Harrisburg, Pa. . 416 W. Tenth St, Erie, Pa. . Ramey, Pa. ' ..3'32.Pi311nsylx-Ianiz1 Ave., Detroit. Mich. .Union Bridge Md. . Sandpoint, Idaho .1046 OgdeIi St.,De11ve1,Colo. . .Pleasant Mount Pa. . .Crisfield, Md. 1917 Guilford Ave. , Baltimore, Md. .120 S. Broadway,Ba1timore,Md. . 120 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. . . . 41 Madison St., Annapolis, Md. . Elderslie Ave., Mt. Washington, Md. ........ .Hampton,Va. .,Millersvi11e Pa. . . . . .Glen Rock, Pa. . . . 1721 Penn. Ave. , Scranton Pa. 167 Ridgewood Ave. , Newark, N. J. . . 2408 N. Ca1vertSt., Baltimore. Md. . . 100 E. Pearl St., New Haven, Conn. . 2740 Parkwood Ave. , Baltimore, Md. . 2224 N. Charles St.,Ba1timore,Md. . . .Lewistown Pa. . . . . 755 Cedar St.,A1ameda,Ca1. . 224 E. Main St. , Clarksburg, W. Va. 1019 De Kalb St.. Norristown, Pa. . . 1735 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. . 254 W. Hoffman St., Baltimore, Md. ...........Lamira,Ohio 1809 Bolton St, Baltimore, Md. A.1too11a, Pa. . . .Pikesville, Md. 3.020 N.Ca1vert St., Baltimore, Md. . - E.111cott City, Md. . 244W Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md. . .Glen Rock, Pa. 1636 N.Ca1vert St, Baltimore, Md. .Buckhannon, W Va. .Reisterstown, Md. HONORARY MEMBER MISS JESSIE WQODROW WILSON . . Washington, D. C. QEhmts of the 621215155 nt 1916 FRESHMAN YEAR Entered College . . . . . Y. W. C. A. Reception . . . . . . . Election of Chairman, Nell Lewis . . Entertainment by 1915 SeniorTea.. Tennis Tournament, 1915 vs. 1916 04050 . . . Basket-Ball Game, 1915 vs. 1916 114050 85 . Sept. . . Sept. . . Sept. . . Sept. . . Oct. . Nov. Dec. 23,1912 27.1912 26,1912 30,1912 5,1912 2,1912 5,1912 5 TUDENTS 87 BRESSLER, MARY G. . . . CHAMBERS, AGNES L. . . . DAWSON, HELEN H. . EVANS. HELEN L. FRANK, MRS. SIMON W. . . GORSUCH, GERTRUDE L. . . . GUTMAN, NETTIE H. . . . MASON, GOLDIE C. . . PINKERTON, JANET B. TROLINGER, CHARLOTTE . . . $petial gamma; . . 125 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. . 18 W. Franklin St., Baltimore, Md. . . 31 McKennan Aveq Washington, Pa. . 218 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Md. . 22 Talbot Road, Windsor Hills, Md. .Fork,Md. . 16 Virginia Ave., Wheeling, W. Va. . . . McConnellsburg, Pa. . Waldheim St., Walbrook, Md. . . Pulaski, Va. 88 89 355i manta of ZBeIta $amma fraternity ESTHER BARTON CRAMPTON GLADYS FULTON MARGARET BUSWELL ELINE VON BORRIES ESTHER PARKER ELLINGER RUTH HAYDEN CHRISTINE CARTER BAGG LOUISE TULL BAKER KATHERINE CLAGETT BECK ELEANOR JACKSON CARY DESIREE BRANCH CLARK MABEL CARTER MAMIE VIRGINIA CAUGHY ELMA ERICK CLARA FRAZEE 1A1pha Betao JANE GoonLoE ELIZABETH GOUCHER MARGARET GRIER URSULE GUARD EVELYN HEWES MELISSA HILL HILL ESTABLISHED MAY. 1891 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1913 1914 ALICE GERTRUDE OWENS 1915 HELEN DOROTHY WELSH LILLIAN H155 MARY GOODE WOOLDRIDGE JEAN FULTON MARY ELIZABETH PHILLIPS BESSE ERVING STOCKING GEORGE MARGARETTA TAYLOR SORORES IN URBE 90 MARY COCHRAN HISS NAN WATERS MCNEAL MARGARET SHOVE MORRIS JANET GOUCHER MILLER JESSIE LOEFFLER PALMER JOE ANNA Ross PANCOAST MABEL MEREDITH REESE EMILIE SOPHIE REINHARD MARY FIELD SADTLER HELEN THOMPSON FLORENCE THOMPSON LOUISE WEST ALICE REANEY WOLFE MARY PARKER WROTH ISABEL JELKE WOOLDRIDGE BETA . . GAMMA . . . EPSILON . ZETA. . . ETA. . . THETA . IOTA . . . KAPPA. . .. LAMBDA MU... NU. ZBelta atmma fraternity FOUNDED 1872 ROLL OF CHAPTERS ...... Washington State University . . University of California . . Ohio State University . . . . . . . , . .Albion College . . Buchtel College . University of Indiana . . University of Illinois . . University of Nebraska ..... University of Minnesota . . . . . . . . . .University of Missouri . University of Idaho XI . OMICRON . RHO . . SIGMA . . TAU . . UPSILON . . PHI . . CHI. . PSI. . . . . . OMEGA ........ ALPHA BETA . . ALUMNAE CHAPTERS BETA SIGMA . ETA UPSILON . GAMMA UPSILON . LAMBDA NU PHI OMEGA CHI SIGMA . , . CHI UPSILON . OMEGA SIGMA . . ALPHI CHI ASSOCIATION BETA LAMBDA ASSOCIATION , . THETA CHI ASSOCIATION. . . . RHO SIGMA ASSOCIATION . . KAPPA THETA ASSOCIATION . . TAU ZETA ASSOCIATION . . PSI OMICRON ASSOCIATION . . PSI PHI ASSOCIATION . . OMEGA ALPHA ASSOCIATION OMEGA ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION . . ALPHA EPSILON ASSOCIATION MU ALPHA ASSOCIATION . . SAN FRANCISCO ASSOCIATION . . University of Michigan . Adelphi College Syracuse University . Northwestern University . University of Iowa . Leland Stanford University . University of Colorado . . Cornell University . . Gaucher College University of Wisconsin . Swarthmore College Seattle, Washington . . Akron, Ohio . Los Angeles, California ...... Minneapolis . Denver . . Chicago . . New York City . . Milwaukee . . Spokane, . Pittsburgh Washington . . Cleveland, Ohio . . Syracuse . . Lincoln, Nebraska . . Iowa. City . .Baltimore . . Philadelphia . . Omaha, Nebraska . . Madison, Wisconsin . . Alliance . . Kansas City . . San Francisco ieta thapter of glpba 3W fraternity ESTABLISHED 1891 ACTIVE MEMBERS MARY BESS ANDERSON DOROTHY LAY ARCHER VIOLA BURT RUTH ANDERSON ISABEL NEWMAN FITZPATRICK ETHEL GROSSCUP ELIZABETH CATON MASON EDITH A. BECK JULIA MARION BULLARD MARY ARNOLD SHANKLIN FANNY SPENCER RUTH HOLLIS TANEYHILL CLARINDA MATHEWS GENEVIEVE MCCOSH FANNIE UPHAM ISABEL WOODS EVELYN HOLTE MARTIN LOTTIE LEE NICHOLS SORORES IN URBE RUTH ADAMS BAER ROSA BALDWIN MARGARET BRIAN BAER META M. BECKER Delt20 ELIZABETH GORDON FOX OotaQ JENNIE WHITBREAD FRAMES Mlphen MARCELLA GOODRICH FLOWERS ELIZABETH HAZELHURST GENEVIEVE HOLTZMAN HENDLEY EDITH STEVENS HOFFMAN LULIE POOLE HOOPER ISABELLA STEVENS HUNNER AILEEN MCKENNY JANET BONHAM MERRYMAN ELEANOR SMITH MEAD ROSALIE HAXALL NOLAND EDNA SPEDDEN NORTON ALICE REUTER EDITH RILEY WINIFRED ROBINSON X0 ANNA EDMUNDS RUTLEDGE MARGARET HILL PAINTER SHRYOCK HETTIE CALDWELL SNEERINGER ETHEL CRANSTON TANEYHILL EVA BANDEL WILSON FAUNTLEROY CORBIN WIGHT ALPHA . . BETA . . GAMMA . . DELTA . . . EPSILON. . ZETA . ETA. . THETA . . IOTA . . . KAPPA . . . LAMBDA . OMICRON . .. PI . . .. RHO leba 3913i 31 raterm'tp FOUNDED 1872 ROLL OF CHAPTERS . Syracuse University . . Northwestern University . . De Pauw University . Cornell University . . University of Minnesota , Goucher College . . . . Boston University ..... . . . . . . . w . . . . . . .University of Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A w . University of Wisconsin . Leland Stanford, Jr., University . . . . .University of California ..... . . . . . . . . . . .Barnard College . . University of Nebraska ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Universityoi Missouri ........ . w . . . . . . . . .University of North Dakota . Ohio State University ALUMNAE CHAPTERS Chicago Minnesota Central New York Western New York Detroit New York City Boston Southern Ithaca San Francisco 97 glpba ethapter at man kappa 9i fraternity HARRIET IDE EAGER WINIFRED ALICE BROWN HELEN KEEVER HESTER LIVINGSTON KING FOUNDED MAY 1892 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1913 GLADYS VIRGINIA NICHOLS 1914 1915 LOUISA DE BERNIERE FITZSIMMONS SUE ELIZABETH GANTT ETHEL NICHOLSON BROWNE LOUISE E. DOWELL ELIZABETH GISH EAGER EDNA SEILER GORDON MARION HOFFMAN DRAPER ALETTA VAN WYCK HOPPER GERTRUDE KNIPP ANNA HEUBECK KNIPP SPECIAL AGNES CHAMBERS SORORES IN URBE ANGELINE GRIFFING WOLF 98 LAURA WHITE FULTON ELIZABETH VANDIVER LACEY CLARA HUNSICKER MURRAY MARION ADELAIDE REID LOUISE FEE LACEY GRACE VOLLMER MARGARET REED LEWIS STELLA A. MCCARTY CAROLINE M. SANDERS GRACE PARKER SOPER ETHEL HOFFMAN STONE FRANCES TROXELL HELEN KEENE TROXELL JOHNETTA VAN METER ieta thapter of 151mm 3913i 313m garnritp ESTABLISHED 1893 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1913 MARIE CAMERON OHLE CHARLOTTE IRENE ROMBERGER LILIAS WILSON HOUSE MARGARETTA ANDREWS WILLIAMSON 1914 ALEDA MAE HIER MARGARET MARTsoLF MARGERY SAWYER 1915 JOSEPHINE WILLOUGHBV CHAPMAN MARY ISABEL DRUMMOND MARJORIE WINGERT SORORES IN URBE EVELYN PHIPPS AUSTIN MARION ELEANOR JONES MARY SAVVYERS BAKER FRANCES ROBBINS KANE ELIZABETH ADELE BROWN MARGARET LEE MARY C. COLT Uotzn FLORENCE MOORE OEHM MARY BROAD DINGLE GRACE HOWARD SMITH 1A1pha1 HELEN D1NGI,F, BELLE BARKER TREIDE ELSIE ROBBINS DODD WILHELMINA ANNE TREIDE ETHEL SHRINER DULANEY MARY ICKES WATSON 1Epsilon1 MARY THATCHER GIBSON 1A1ph20 NELLIE SNOWDEN WATTS MARGARET IRVING HANDY NELLIE VVILMOT 1A1pha1 JEANETTE WILMOT LAlphM 102 $amma 3331' 13m $nruritp FOUNDED 1874 ROLL OF CHAPTERS ALPHA . . ..... . ....... . . . . . . ...... . . Syracuse University BETA ..... . . . . .......... . . , , ...... University of Michigan GAMMA . . ................ . . . ...... University of Wisconsin DELTA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . ....... Boston University EPSILON . . . . ...... . . . . . . . V . . . . Northwestern University ZETA . . . . . . ...... . . . . ....... Goucher College ETA . . . .......... . . . . University of California THETA . . . . . . V . . , . ..... . . . . . . . . . University of Denver IOTA . . . . . . ..................... Barnard College KAPPA . . ....... A . ..... University of Minnesota LAMBDA . . ........... , . . . . University of Washington MU .................... . . . . . . . Leland Stanford University NU . . ............................. University of Oregon XI ............. . . . V ..... . . . . ...... University of Idaho ALUMNAE CHAPTERS Syracuse Chicago Boston Milwaukee Denver San Francisco New York Minneapolis 105 leba Eelta Gibapter of kappa leba mbeta fraternity ESTABLISHED 1896 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1913 FRANCES STIRLING CLARKE DOROTHY DAVIS MARJORIE ANGELINE DAY EMMA LOUISE DULANEY 1914 ELINOR SAWTELLE ANNAN HELEN HARRISON ANNA LOUISA PAYNE MARY ANTOINETTE VON WYSZECKI MARY WILSON BLANCHE ELIZABETH Ross DOROTHY WILSON 1915 HELEN SOPHIA Fmscn GRACE GERTRUDE HAYMAKER MARY HOFFMAN FRANCES PAGE ALICE WHITINGALE WATSON SORORES IN URBE LAURA HINDS BENNETT GRACE ETHEL BENNETT BERTHA BROOMELL Mlpha BetaO FRANCINA CAMPBELL AMELIA PAGE DAME CHRISTIE Y. DULANEY ERNESTINE STIER DULANEY EMELIE CHAMBERLAIN DUNBAR ETHEL HENDRICKSON DORSEY ETHEL ADDISON ELMER HARRIET BAKER EWALT RUTH HASLUP NATHALIE HENSEL 106 ELEANOR PAULINE HOPKINS MARY BROOMELL HULL Alpha Betzo LETTIE JOHNSON M10 HARRIET JOHNSON Mw KATHARINE LINDSAY MARY CLARK MARDEN ELLA Woon MILLER mmegao ANN GOODSELL SLEMONS wpsiloxo ESTHER DONNELLY SMITH QsD ADELAIDE PORTER THOMSON RUTH TAYLOR MARY VIRGINIA WARD ELIZABETH BRADFORD Mlpha Zeteo nlJWfer i c a cum . god 'cm u 9 ram aw HM 'I'IFFANng C0. ALPHA . . BETA . . GAMMA . . DELTA . . kappa leba mm fraternity ALEHA . . . BETA . . DELTA . EPSILON . . ETA ...... IOTA . . . KAPPA . . . LAMBDA . . MU. . R110 . TAU . . . . . . UPSILON . . . . PHI . . CH1 . . PSI . . . . . OMEGA . . ALPHA BETA FOUNDED JANUARY. 1870 ROLL OF CHAPTERS ....................... De Pauw University ALPHA GAMMA . . ALPHA DELTA . ALPHA ZETA . . . ALPHA ETA . ALPHA THETA . SIGMA. . GAMMA ALPHA IOTA 1 ALPHA KAPPA . ALPHA MU . . . ALPHA OMICRON ALPHA LAMBDA . . ALPHA NU . . ALPHA XI . . . ALPHA PI . . EPSILON . . ZETA . . ETA . . THETA IOTA . . KAPPA . . OMICRON . . . Indiana State University . University of Illinois . Wooster University . University of Michigan , Cornell University . University of Kansas . University of Vermont . Allegheny College . University of Nebraska . Northwestern University . University of Minnesota Leland Stanford, Jr., University Syracuse University . University of Wisconsin . University of California . Swarthmore College . Ohio State University . Gaucher College . . Barnard College . Vanderbilt University . University of Texas . University of Toronto . . Butler College . Washington University . Adelphi College . University of Missouri . University of Oklahoma . University of Washington . Montana State University Oregon State University .University of North Dakota ALUMNAE CHAPTERS .Greencastle Indiana . Minneapolis . New York City ...... Chicago Columbus, Ohio . Indianapolis . Burlington, Vermont . Philadelphia ..... Los Angeles . Pittsburgh . Cleveland . Syracuse . . Kansas City . Seattle 109 P1 . . . . R110. . . . SIGMA . . TAU ...... UPSILON PHI. . CH1 . . PSI . . OMEGA ALPHA BETA 1 . ALPHA GAMMA . . ALPHA DELTA . . . . . ALPHA EPSILON . . . . . Topeka, Kansas . Denver, Colorado . St. Louis .......... Lincoln . San Francisco . . Baltimore . Omaha, Nebraska . . . . Evanston, Illinois ........ Portland . Toronto . Madison . Stanford . Providence marylanh leha thapter at 391' 132m 3913i fraternity CHARTERED 1897 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1913 MARGARET BENNETT KINSLEY GRACE THEODORA LEWIS CORNELIA FRANCES STRADER AMY LOUISA BECK LEONA CAROLINE BUCHWALD LOUISE ARTHUR CLARIDGE GRACE ETHEL TAYLOR 1914 HILDA MARION BEGGS ANNIE RAY MOWBRAY EDITH M . OSTERSTOCK 1915 ETHEL CHAMBERLIN ALICE BARNES ELDRIDGE CAROLINE DIGGS HESTER Hussy: ELEANOR DIGGS MARGUERITE IVIAGRUDER 1916 LENORE N ETTING SORORES IN URBE JANE BIGELOW Undiana Gammao EMILY ROBINSON BOYLE ESTHER L. Cox Wennsylvania AlphaJ CORA SCOTT Dorv mew York Alpha GRACE O. EDWARDS Ullinois Zetzn KATE ERNST MARY HARRIS Pennsy1vania Beta MRS. CHARLES HASKINS ISABEL DRURY HUEBECK HELEN LAMB HULL Pennsy1vania Alphzn CELESTE JANVIER amuisiana Alphzo ALICE VOLKMAN KEEFER Wisconsin AlphEO MAY LANSFIELD KELLER ELIZABETH KELLUM Pledged. 110 MARGARET LAMB Gwnnsylvania Alpha MARY LAMB Pennsy1vania AlphM MRS. JOHN MURRAY UQmsas Alplm LUCY E. MURRAY KATHLEEN IVIOORE MALLORY M. EVELYN NICHOLSON LOUISE PEARCE Gialifornia Alpha SARA PORTER BLANCHE REISINGER HELEN DOLL TOTTLE LOUISE NELSON VAN SANT GRACE SARA WILLIAMS Ullinois Demo MARY ALICE WOOD MOLLY WESTON WOOD 391' 13m 39m fraternity FOUNDED APRIL 28. 1867 ROLL OF CHAPTERS CALIFORNIA ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leland Stanford University CALIFORNIA BETA . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . A . . . . . University of California COLORADO ALPHA. . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . .Universityof Colorado COLORADO BETA . . . . . . . . , Denver University COLUMBIA ALPHA . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . George Washington University ILLINostETA...,.. . ,.,.............,.LombardCollege ILLINOIS DELTA, . . . . . , . . . . . . . .Knox College ILLINOIS EPSILON . . . . . , . . . . . . . , . . , . . . Northwestern University ILLINOIS ZETA . V . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .University of Illinois INDIANA ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Franklin College INDIANA BETA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Indiana University INDIANA GAMMA. . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Butler University IOWA ALPHA . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Iowa Wesleyan University IOWA BETA. . . I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Simpson College IOWA ZETA . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Iowa State University IOWA GAMMA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Iowa State College KANSAS ALPHA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Kansas University LOUISIANA ALPHA. . . . . . . . . . . , . , . . , . . . .Newcomb College MASSACHUSETTS ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . Boston University MARYLANDALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . GoucherCollege MICHIGAN ALPHA , . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hillsdale College MICHIGAN BETA. . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . .University of Michigan MINNESOTA ALPHA . . . . A . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Minnesota MISSOURI ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . University of Missouri NEBRASKA BETA . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . , . . .University of Nebraska NEW YORK ALPHA . . . . , . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . Syracuse University NEW YORK BETA . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . , . . . . . . .Barnard College OHIO ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ohio University OHIO BETA V . . . . A . . V . . . . . , . . . . . . . . Ohio State University OHIO GAMMA . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . , . . .University of Wooster OKLAHOMA ALPHA. . . . . . . , . , . , . . .Universityof Oklahoma ONTARIO ALPHA . . . , , , . . . . . . . . . V . . . . . .University of Toronto PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA . . , . . . . . . . . V . . . . Swarthmore College PENNSYLVANIA BETA . . . . . , . . . . . . . , . . . . BucknellUniversity PENNSYLVANIA GAMMA . . , . . . , . . . . . . . . . . .Dickinson College TEXAS ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Universityof Texas VERMONT ALPHA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Middlesburg College VERMONT BETA . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . , . . Universityof Vermont VVISCONSIN ALPHA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . .University of Wisconsin MISSOURI BETA . . . . . . . . V . . . . . . . . . Washington University WASHINGTON ALPHA. . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . .University of Washington WYOMING ALPHA . . . . . . V . . . , . . . . . . . . University of Wyoming ARKANSAS ALPHA . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . , . . University of Arkansas 113 361' Gibapter at $elta $2M EBelta fraternity ESTABLISHED 1898 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1913 ELEANOR ELIZABETH COBLENTZ HILDA DEVRIES EMMA JOHNSON PALMER 1914 ISABEL ROCKWELL 1915 BARBARA LOUISE BOGLE ELIZABETH CRAWFORD MARJORIE NASON RUTH ROGERS SARA PEACE WALKER ZANA WESTERMAN MIRIAM JOSEPHINE STROUSE EMILY H. DAVIS ALICE NASON SORORES IN URBE ETHEL RICE ASHLEY DOROTHEA K. BLASS ESTELLE ROEHLE BYRNE JEANNETTE DERR A1pha X0 AUDREY WILLIAMS DAVIS MARY DURAND DUNLAP 0 0 ANNABELLE TULLOCH EVANS GD ANNA HARRISON MILDRED ALBRO HOGE MARY LENTZ JOHNSON 114 MILDRED RIFE JUDD CELESTE H. KLEINLE F. FINETTE LYNCH ELIZABETH TUMBLESON LEUTSCHER ALICE MALLILEAU MILDRED MCGINNIS VIOLA MACLELLAN Mlphzo RUTH MCLAREN PARDU HELEN PRACHT M. LETITIA STOCKETT Waltz: $2M Etna fraternity FOUNDED 1888 ROLL OF CHAPTERS ALPHA . BETA . . . GAMMA DELTA . . EPSILON ZETA ..... ETA . . . . . . THETA . . . KAPPA . . LAMBDA MU . . . . NU . . . . XI . . . . . OMICRON . PI...... ...... RHO . . . . . . TAU ........ UPSILON . PHI . . PSI . . . . ALPHA XI . . ALPHA GAMMA . . BETA ZETA . OMEGA . . . . . DELTA ALPHA . THETA ALPHA . . THETA BETA THETA DELTA . . THETA GAMMA . . ALPHA ALPHA . THETA EPSILON . . DELTA BETA . . . . DELTA GAMMA . . DELTA ETA . . . OMEGA DELTA . DELTA ZETA . . ..... . 1 . . . Boston University ...... St. Lawrence University ......... Adrian College .Simpson College ...... . Knox College . University of Cincinnati . University of Vermont . University of Minnesota . University of Nebraska .Baker University .University of Wisconsin Ohio State University . Goucher College . Syracuse University . University of California . . Barnard College ..... . Bucknell University . Northwestern University ..... . . University of Iowa . University of Pennsylvania HRandolph Macon Colby College . .Transylvania College .Leland Stanford College . . De Pauw University . University of Washington . University of Colorado . University of Oregon . University of Oklahoma . . . Adelphi College . Southwestern University . Miami College . Vanderbilt University ...... . .Coe College .Iowa State College .Franklin College ALLIANCE CHAPTERS ALPHA . . . BETA. . . GAMMA . . DELTA . . EPSILON . . ZETA . . ETA . . THETA . . OMICRON . . SIGMA . . RHO . . DENVER . . BALTIMORE . LAMBDA . T115111 DELTA . THETA GAMMA . ..... Boston, Massachusetts . Canton, New York . Adrian, Michigan Indianola, Iowa . Galesburg, Illinois . Cincinnati, Ohip Burlington, Vermont . Minneapolis, Minnesota Syracuse, New York . Middletown, Connecticut . New York City . Denver, Colorado . Baltimore, Maryland . Baldwin, Kansas . Eugene, Oregon . Norma, Oklahoma 117 CHICAGO . . DELTA ALPHA . KAPPA . . . Los ANGELES . . MU.. MILWAUKEE . ALPHA UPSILON . UPSILON . . NORFOLK . . . THETA ALPHA . . SYRACUSE . . W'ASHINGTON 1 . Chicago, Illinois . Greencastle, Indiana . Lincoln, Nebraska . . . . Los Angeles, California . Madison, Wisconsin . Milwaukee1 Wisconsin . Waterville, Maine . Evanston, Illinois . Berkeley, California . Iowa City, Iowa . Columbus, Ohio . Norfolk, Virginia Seattle, Washington Liverpool New York . Washington District of Columbia Ebeta thaptet of mm amma elta fraternity ESTABLISHED 1908 ACTIVE MEMBERS 1914 KATHERINE SHERWOOD BOBLITZ MARION ETHEL DALE DOROTHY JOESTING SADIE ALLISON meltm MAUD STRICKLAND GALLON MARY KATHERINE JONES ETHEL LINTON 'tPledged. ALICE MARGUERITE ZOUCK 1915 ADA ELIZABETH ZOUCId SORORES IN URBE ELIZABETH F. YARDLEY 118 RUTH TINGLEY MADGE DE GROFFT THURLow EDNA SINGEWALD ETHEL STALEY MILDRED TODD MARGARET WATERS JANET HOLMES WOOD ALPHA BETA.... GAMMA . D ELTA EPSILON . ZETA . . ETA . THETA . IOTA , . KAPPA . LAMBDA . FOUN DED 1904 ROLL OF CHAPTERS ALLIANCE CHAPTERS Central New York Alumnae Madison, Wisconsin Minneapolis, Minnesota Middletown, Connecticut 121 mm $amma $2Ita fraternity . Syracuse University . University of Wisconsin . . VVesleyau University . University of Minnesota . . University of Kentucky . Ohio VVesle-yan University . De Pauw University . . Gaucher College University of Washington . . Alleghany College Northwestern University 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 39m 33m ?Rappa 33ml of marylanh CHARTER MEMBERS CHARLES HODELL WM. H. MALTBIE JOHN F. GOUCHER FANNIE COOK GATES MAYNARD M . METCALF ALUMNAE MEMBERS ANNA LEWIS COLE EUPHEMIA MCCLINTOCK JOHNETTA VAN METER FLORENCE PEEBLES LETITIA MORRIS SNOW LUCY ELIZABETH SMITH DE BONILLA MARY CLOYD BURNLEY STIFLER AMY HEWES MARGARET BROWNELL POWELL MAY LANSFIELD KELLAR ANNINA PERIAM DANTON WAUNDA HARTSHORN PETRUNKEWITCH ANNADORA BAER TUPPER ANNA HOFFMAN HALL JESSIE MAUD LOEFFLER PALMER MARY ELIZABETH MORSE BERTHA MAY CLARK LETTICE LATANE SPARROW EMMA CHILTON BASS MILLER GERTRUDE ANDREWS HALDERSTADT JANET GOUCHER MILLER ANNETTA BROWN HOPKINS IDA EVANS BIXLER AGNES GORDON MURDOCK MARIE ELEANOR NAST WHERRY EDNA MAY BRIGGS FROST NANCY HIGGINBOTHAM CATCHING THYRA CRAWFORD HELEN SILNER ELLIS MARGARET SHOVE MORRIS HELEN TURNBULL WAITE COLEMAN SARA WHITE CULL ANNIE LOVE DOWDELL DENSON MARY WALTER DRUMMOND MARGARET EDITH KELLEY EMILY FULLER SLEMAN ELIZABETH SMITH THOMAS NELLIE SNOWDEN WATTS WILLA EDNA WILSON MADGE MAY YOUNG MABEL LAVINA BACKUS JOSEPHINE M. BARTHOLOMEW INGALLS MARY E. BOSLEY ETHEL NICHOLSON BROWNE LEVA BURTON GRAFF ANNA SOPHIE WEUSTHOFF 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 CLARA STROUSE BERWANGER MARY V. ROBINSON IRENE REINER BESSIE I. MILLER FLORENCE HOOPER LAURA CAIRNES DELIA COOKE OLIVE WETZEL DENNIS LUCILE GRAHAM VVILLEY MARTHA LOUISE PRINTUP EDITH TIMBERLAKE EMMA LOUISE WARDELL JESSIE WOODROW WILSON ELSIE GETZENDANNER CLARKE LEILA ROBERTA CUSTARD ETHEL ESTELLE EDWARDS ELIZABETH FRANCES STEVENS KATHERINE HOOPER MARY LOUISE SAYRE KOCH ADAH BLANCHE ROE AMELIA HERMINA FRITZ MABEL BELT EVELYN VVYLIE BETTS CARRIE D. BURGUNDER ALICE F. COHEN BLANCHE S. LAMBERSON CARRIE O. UPHAM ROSE M. URNER ANNA D. VVARD FRANCES E. YERKES MERLE S. BATEMAN KATHRYN BRUCHHOLZ FLORENCE E. EDDOWES ELIZABETH FRENCH JOHNSON MARY ELIZABETH JONES ETHEL D. KANTON ETHEL LINTON CONSTANCE MAYA-DAS GEORGIA PARRY SARAH HUGER BACOT ELEANOR JACKSON CARY MARGARET E. CHEETHAM TERESA COHEN CELESTE H. KLEINLE NETTIE P. MCGILL MARY MELVIN SARAH A. OSBORN '7 . I I . ' ;' HIM: .V z $ o I,,.... ,9! Hknr, fA 2-. : '1YAIXKK40M .. nzzaa 71. IN I, '. 00:. o. - bu- 64, , 0.0. noun O I... o... 123 gamut gotta? FRANCES CLARKE ESTHER CRAMPTON HARRIET EAGER HELEN HARRISON GRACE LEWIS GLADYS NICHOLS FANNY SPENCER RUTH TANEYHILL MARGARETTA WILLIAMSON 124 ELINOR ANNAN WINIFRED BROWN MARGARET IVIARTSOLF ELIZABETH MASON HELEN KEEVER ALICE BOVVERS RUTH ANDERSON EDITH BECK MARION BULLARD SUE ELIZABETH GANTT LOUISE FEE LACEY LOTTIE LEE NICHOLS BESSE STOCKING GEORGE TAYLOR GRACE VOLLMER 126 weapon: JEANNETTE CARPENTER LOUISA FITZ SIMMONS 'GRACE VOLLMER AMY WALSH 127 JOSEPHINE CHAPMAN EVELYN MARTIN ELINE VON BORRIES DOROTHY WELSH members ETHEL CHAMBERLIN LOUISE LACEY HELEN FRISCH ANNA MULLIKIN RUTH HAYDEN SYLVANIA NAGI.E VALERIA KRENTZLIN LOUISE PENNINGTON MARGARET SCHMIDT ibnnorarp jiflembtrs MISS SIGNE KXLLMAN MISS CECILIA MYRSTEN 128 Elsie Stein Susan Housekeeper Mary Hoffman Mary Colt Carlotta Rishell Grace Yeakle Dorothy Welsh Ivy Yeakle mitians 1912:13 Margaret Love Marjorie Day Frances Clark Isabel Fitz Patrick Ethel Grosscup Ethel Miller Gertrude Porter Maybell Burne Constance Ayer Esther Hulsart Harrict 1dr: Riga I. aum GEM 97 Lillian Ho we 1f wan Hunt Madge Kmdy 7 H Katherine Doviwon r I . m f3 t r, , Carlotta Richen ? 31 , ' 4,1 ;' MabelixfEhuranan x y NayGWooldridge 131 thfims GRACE LEWIS, ,13 President GLADYS NICHOLS, 13 lst Vice-President SUSAN MOORE, ,13 Vice-President Q FANNY STAUFFER, 13 Vice-President X FLORENCE DAVISON, 14 Treasurer HELEN KEEVER, '14 Corresponding Secretary CAROLINE DIGGS, 15 Recording Secretary Executing wuarh THE OFFICERS AND MARGARET MARTSOLF, Y14 ANNA MULLIKIN, 15 LILLIAN WARING, '16 b 132 Gamma CONSTANCE BLACKSTOCK, 13 President ELEANOR COBLENTZ, '13 ViceJJresident DOROTHY DAVIS, 13 Trea surer MARGERY SAWYER, ,14 Correspondin g Secretary SYLVANIA NAGLE, 15 Recordin g Secretary Ginairmen ut Qtummitttes MARY ARNOLD SHANKLIN, '13, Devotional MARION EVANS, 14, Missionary HILDA DEVRIES. ,13, Bible Study DOROTHY ARCHER, y13, Practical Service WINIFRED BROWN, 14, Social MABEL SCHUREMAN, ,13, Isabella Thoburn ESTHER CRAMPTON, ,13, Summer Conference 133 O;3Fucers 6 Carol: ne PE 9 per Moe :pIESIdETd- Edqfke B Hamxsdw. Cc'r. 9:65 - Delphme A. LA m MPrensuresr .. CM'LL Ow IEHT Honorary mam bew- - Prudent - Dorofhg L are her Rec 3253-7191'mn V Has'wp 134 PDILOKOLM 15 nor; Dan! Ghe SUPPoseD mummv ' 'Ms svvpenw hwnucmv FROM ms LONE? SLCEP, co the GRGWC peuena or rats manY Fmenps mm mouRneRs 135 W um, a h 39v kMW!WHSIHK' N'famsw'd Hi v , r I VEMINWI xx xJVfuleu K3 A'wngmijr: $uuthern Qtluh MARIE OHLE .................... President LILLIAS HOUSE ................. Vice-President MARY HOLMES ................... Treasurer MARION EVANS ...... . . Corresponding Secretary GEORGIA ROWE. . . . ...... Recording Secretary iaennsylhania QLIub MARGARET B. KINSLEY ............. . President ALICE WATSON ............ Secretary and Treasurer 39bilusuphital $uzietp AMY R. C. HARRIS, A. B., Y12 . . . .................. President ADA CLARA WIMMER, A. B., 12 ................ Vice-President HARRIET LOUISE WINN, 14 ..................... Secretary $eulugtcal Quad? MARY WILSON, '13 ......................... President HELENE CONNETT, 15 ..................... Vice-President HELEN DOROTHY WELSH, y15 .................... Secretary RUTH H. TANEYHILL . . .................... President HAZEL SMITH ............................ Secretary SUSIE CLARKE . . .................... Treasurer DR. j, S. SHEFLOE DR. A. B. BIBBINS nganquin QEIuh QExemtibe 330mm THE OFFICERS AND ELIZABETH LACEY x u U l: ,1 ,u MWM MARION REID 136 ESTHER BARTON CRAMPTON . EVELYN MARTIN . RAY MOWBRAY ELINOR ANNAN LILIAS HOUSE SUSAN MOORE mWMiad? ,1?KMIW fx$ macaw Qtommittee 7;,3! . President Secretary . . Treasurer BLANCHE Ross EDNA SCHWARTZ EDNA SINGEWALD members; 1912 Eelegatiun 1913 CONSTANCE BLACKSTOCK ESTHER CRAMPTON HILDA DEVRIES HELEN HARRISON SUSAN HUNT ANNA PAYNE GRACE ROSE FANNY STAUFFER GRACE YEAKEL HELEN FRISCH H 14;STER HEISSIC 1915 SYLVANIA NAGLE 137 1912 FLoimNCE BOYCE ELEANOR HOPKINS BETTY WINDLEY 1914 VVINIFRED BROWN JANE HOOPER LENORE MEID BLANCHE Ross EDNA SCHWARTZ LOUISE PENNINGTON EDNA SINGEVVALD EG:EEUJE yawy; A QBffiters MARGARETTA WILLIAMSON, '13 President CHARLOTTE ROMBERGER, y13 Vice-President MARGARET MARTSOLF, 14 Secretary KATHRYN MARQUIS, 15 Treasurer ELIZABETH MASON, '14 Elector of College Settlement Association Members:at:largc at QExetutihe 330mb CARLOTTA RISCHELL, '13 GEORGIA BELT, '15 RUTH ANDERSON, ,14 MARGUERITE MAGRUDER, 15 DR. ELEANOR L. LORD, DR. THADDEUS P. THOMAS, Faculty Advisers 138 CHARLOTTE ROMBERGER, Chai rrrrr n VERA DUFF LOUISE LACEY MATILDA SPARKES MARGARET SISSON 139 013132 ?Ralenhg $tatf HARRIET IDE EAGER 13, Edz'tor-z'n-Clzz'ef stutiate QEhitnrs CHARLOTTE FITZHUGH NORRIS' 13 GRACE RIDDLE ,14 EDITH JOHNSON 13 MIRIAM FRANC 15 JEAN FULTON '14 JOHANNA STUDE '15 Qlumnat QEhI'tur CARRIE M. PROBST, Gaucher College, Baltimore LILIAS HOUSE 13, Busz'nexs Zlimzager stistants EMMA LOUISE DULANEY ,13 MARGERY SAVVYER l14 MARGUERITE MAGRUDER :15 140 MUSICAL 141 $1.22 4111113 QBttiters MARJORIEDAY,,13 ..... ..........Presidetit ELINOR S. ANNAN, ,14 . . . . . . . . L . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager CHARLOTTE SHICK, 115 . . . . . ............... . . . . Secretary MARY BESS ANDERSON, 113 .......... . . . ........ Accompanist .17 irst gmptanus ELINOR ANNAN, '14 SUSAN MOORE, 113 HELEN ATWOOD, '16 HELEN PECK, 116 BARBARA BOGLE, 115 MILDRED ROGERS, 116 BESSIE ECKELS, 113 CHARLOTTE SHICK, 115 HELEN KEMPER, 116 LILLIAN WARING, '16 EVELYN MARTIN, 115 MARY GOODE WOOLDRIDGE, '13 GRACE YEAKEL, ,13 52mm $npranus MARGUERITE CLEAVELAND, 116 ANNA DICKEY, 114 HELEN CURLEY, y16 LILLIAN H155, '13 MARJORIE DAY, 113 ETHEL MCKNIGHT, 115 HILDA DEVRIES, ,13 ALICE OWENS, 114 FAITH SPEDDY, 116 first Qltus RUTH AMISS, 116 DOROTHY JOESTING, 115 HELEN BARTON, 113 EDITH MCDOWELL, ,14 FRANCES BRYANT, '16 ETHEL MINDS, '16 KATHERINE DONALDSON, ,16 LENORE NETTING, 116 gaemnh guns LAURA FULTON, 113 MARJORIE NASON, '15 ELIZABETH FENDERICH, ,14 MARJORIE WINGERT, ,15 LILIAS HOUSE, 113 Ivy YEAKEL. '16 142 143 QEuIIege QUJDI'I? D. MERRICK SCOTT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Director and Organist QBffiters EVELINAW.R0MEVFSCH,!13. . . . . . . . . . . , . . . A . . . . . .President MARJORIE NASON, 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . .Secretary-Treasurer HAZELSMITH,'14... ....................,..Librarian inrst gupranns BARBARA BOGLE, ,15 HAZEL SMITH, 14 ALICE OWENS, 14 BESSE STOCKING, ,15 EVELINA ROMETSCH, 13 MARY GOODE WOOLDRIDGE, '13 CHARLOTTE SHICK, 15 GRACE YEAKEL, 13 gamut gupranns LESLIE CAMERON, '16 ANNA RODDY, '16 BESSIE ECKLES, ,13 MILDRED ROGERS, 16 MARJORIE NASON, 15 LILLIAN WARING, ,16 guns RUTH AMISS, ,16 ALEDA HIER, ,14 FRANCES BRYANT, ,16 CARLOTTA RISHELL, 13 ELIZABETH FENDERICH, '14 MARJORIE VVINGERT, 16 IVY YEAKEL, 16 144 145 manbulin QEIuh $ttit2rs GLADYS FULTON, '13 . President HAZEL SMITH, '14 . . . . Business Manager LAURA EASLEY, '13 . Pianist MANDOLINS GLADYS FULTON, '13 Emma VON BORRIES, '15 KATHERINE BOBLITZ, '14 CONSTANCE AYER, '16 HAZEL SMITH, ,14 KATHARYN CHISM, y16 STANLEYETTA WOOLEDGE, '14 ELIZABETH MARKS, '16 ETHELINDA BLACK, '15 JOSEPHINE MEEK, '16 HELEN SMITH, '15 PENELOPE WESTCOTT, '16 VIOLINS SUE BERKEY, '13 IIILDA 1315603, '14 CARLOTTA RISCHELL ELIZABETH GEBHARDT, '16 RUTH HIER, '16 NIARY LAMBERT, '16 GUI I'ARS MATILDA SPARKS 146 147 149 athletic ggsuu'atinn mama MAR'GARET B. KINSLEY . HELEN HARRISON . SYLVANIA NAGLE . EDITH M. OSTERSTOCK . VERA DUFF . . LEONA BUCHWALD . MARGERY SAWYER . . ETHEL CHAMBERLIN . MAYBELL BURNER 150 . President . Vice-Presiden . .Secretary .7Treasurer . Member-at-Large . Senior Member . Junior Member . Sophomore Member Freshman Member T E NMS Season 1911:1912 ZEmnis Qingles ELEANOR CARY vs. LOUISE PENNINGTON Won by Louise Pennington $tasun 1912:1913 mantis Enables LOUISE PENNINGTON AND ELINE VON BORRIES. 1915 215. MAYBELL BURNER AND KATHARYN CHISM, 1916 Won by 1915 151 igagketagall Gleam: 1913 Forwards Centers Guards LILLIAN WARD MARGARET KINSLEY LAURA FULTON LILIAs HOUSE GLADYS NICHOLS , HARRIET EAGER LEONA BUCHWALD Manage0 1915 F orwards Centers Guards ELINE VON BORRIES LOUISE PENNINGTON CAROLINE DIGGS SYLVANIA NAGLE EVELYN MARTIN LUCILE GIBERLES ANNA MULLIKIN Manage0 152 F orwards GRACE RIDDLE MARIAN KENNELLY FORWARDS SARA LOWRIE MATILDA ROBINSON gasketJEaII ?Eeams 1914 Centers HELEN KEEVER LENORE MEID MARGARET MACROBERTS Manage0 1916 Centers MARGARET ELLINGER KATHERINE CHISM KATHERINE CHISM Qianaged 153 Guards MARGARET MACROBERTS MARION EVANS Guards HOPE GRAFF PENELOPE WESTCOTT Q0 J teat Tithe mempwt , A153; SUNNY AFTERNOON in 1912, the month of Hrare days. ,i A tree-clad hillside across a , Jwa little brook. An expectant throng in gala attire. The music of strings close at hand, t UILJ-XV the shriek of a freight train in the distance. Surely a most modern scene, you would tgqg say. A sudden pause, then enter the stately, purple-robed magician with his fair, slender daughter, and presto I we are transported back through the centuries to the fairy isle with Prospero and Miranda, Ariel and Caliban. What dignity and serenity mark this exiled noble, driven from his dukedom by a treacherous brother, and with what magnanimity he hnally forgives his enemy I With what authority he quells the unruly Caliban, what fatherly tenderness he displays in telling the story of their exile to his daughter. And mark the obedience and hlial love with which Miranda listens to his rule-poor Miranda soon to be torn between that obedience and another love, for strangers are already invading the peaceful shores of the island. Dashing Ferdinand enters and MirandaVs youthful heart is won. Fate in the shape of Prospero intervenes, and Ferdinand is forced to labor for his captor. Miranda steals in to be with him, and ensues the most charming of love scenes. Meanwhile Ferdinandis distracted father, King of Naples, is wildly seeking his son and bemoaning his loss. Unfortunate monarch, danger threatens him in the midst of his sorrow. Treachery begets treachery, and Prosperds false brother would help the king's brother outdo his own dark deed by adding to them the crowning sin of murder. Luckily their intent is foiled. With their black-hearted treason is forcibly contrasted the loyalty of old Gonzalo, who, though footsore and weary, strives with the garrulity of old age to comfort the stricken monarch. 156 Yet the comedy element is not lacking. Who does not smile as he remembers the antics of Trinculo, and his ever thirsty comrade Stephano ? See their drunken gravity and attempt at pompous demeanor when by invitation of Caliban they assume the lordship of the island. Brutish Caliban sullenly submissive in Prospero's presence, sullenly vindictive in plotting against him, had cause to regret his change of masters when their stupid plots are brought to naught by watchful Ariel. In and out through the play, like a bright thread in a woven fabric Hashes the form of Ariel. Now leading spell-bound the astonished Ferdinand, now saving the life of the king, now foiling the plans of the conspirators, the merry fay hits across the scenes. Airy and graceful, he contributes to the play the fairy atmosphere which adds so much to its charm. The story moves on to its happy ending, and the father finds his son, the plans of treachery miscarry ; the last words fall from Prosperots lips ; Ariel is free. The play is over. With a start we are back in the everyday world. Where are the enchanted shores we have just left? Melted into air, thin air, And, like this unsubstantial pageant faded, Leave not a wrack behind. 157 $eanne If gr: POEM presented poetically with a touch of religious mysticism, rather than a play of stirring incident--such was the production of the Class of 1913. As usual, the name and nature of the play had been a matter of conjecture, and when a beautiful poster ' representing a slender armor-clad maid mounted on a white horse that proudly trod a field of gold appeared in the corridor of Goucher Hall, we realized that at last the Seniors were courageously to attempt H something absolutely new.H The experiment was a difhcnlt one. A spectacle grand enough to tax the resources of the greatest theatre had to be reduced to the dimensions of a stage inadequate for a H parlor comedy; N and yet the result justified the attempt. In place of glare and blare we had charm; instead of melodrama we had poetry. The interpretation of the central tigure tFrances ClarkeT had the impressiveness of a religious rite and the pathos to be found only in the story of Jeanne. The dreamer, the mystic, the innocent girl, the courageous enthusiast, each element in the wonderful character was reflected in the acting of the part; and there were many in the audience who forgot that they were witnessing a perform- ance and lived for awhile in the times when there were miracles to perform and saints to perform them. The part of thlengon tMarjorie DayL Jeanne,s twin-soul, wanting only her faith, was quite as sincere, effective, affecting. The subtle and villainous Treniovelle tLanra FultonL the 158 rugged La Hire tLilias HouseL the vacillating Charles tEmma WeyforthL the fascinating Catherine tMarie OhleL each was an artistic interpretation. Deserving special mention, too, were the appealing episodes of Gerard tSusan MooreL and Hauriette tLeona BuchwaldL and of Louis de Contes tHelen Strehlauk and the low-character impersonations of the tailor tGrace BlondheinU and the bootmakcr tConstance Blackstockl It is useless to enumerate. A11 did well. The play was a success. We shall remember it for many a day. 159 OR Lg AS THEY WOULD LIKE IT Q C 5 THE TEMPEST m The perfect May day dawned, and With the blossoming of the woodlands a cherished little flower was bursting into full bloomea Hower sown in gratitude and nurtured in love by the Sophomores, to be presented at its best to the sister class which had always stood ready with friendly aid and fellowship. Like a iiower the Sophomores had watched their play grow and develop-for it was the work of their own minds and hearts-and now, at last, on the wooded shore of the Bay they were presenting it to the Seniors. Here a HTempest'i raged fiercely between the men and women of a magic realm; here King Lear, Macbeth, and the Wife of Bath, the Friar of the Canterbury Tales, the Red Cross Knight, and Hamlet, with his fathefs ghost, all met and were dismayed by wives on suffrage bent. 160 Here these same strong-minded women fell back before an onslaught of fearsome Microbes, from which their disdained men-folk rescued them. Thus, the tempest was quelled and ladies fair, with valiant knights, lived in love and harmony together. And the Sophomores felt a new and added joywthat of an intimacy gained through working together, overcoming obstacles together, winning success together. The day is one which 1914 will cherish as a iiower that will not fade. 161 IMMENSEE Immensee! What color and light, grace and movement, softness and shadow that word brings before the eye of memory. The Class of 1913 were singularly happy in their choice and production of their pantomime for the Freshmen, and presented the little German story in all its quaintness and charm so vividly that the audience lived in it for the hour. COPPELIA On Friday evening, December thirteenth, the Class of 1916 presented the charming result of their labors of a month or more-the pantomime, Coppelia. The pretty village tale itself, the picturesque costumes and graceful dances all conspired to make it a very attractive entertainment. The proceeds from the sale of tickets, amounting to about one hundred dollars were given to the Goucher College Fund. V 162 QEuIIege Qtamp 31 ire OCTOBER 12. 1912 HE second annual Camp Fire was held again at Towson, whither almost the whole student body and many of the faculty merrily journeyed that perfect October day. '1 The forenoon was spent in a general frolijthree-deep, dodge-ball, bull-in-theering and other childhood favorites being on the program. After the usual pic-nic lunch, unusual in that there was plenty, the classes entertained each other with amusing , stunts, and while the actors were going through the last throes of preparation various champions of the presidential candidates met in thrilling wrestling matches. That such a day as this does more than almost anything else toward making that elusive h College Spirit very nearly tangible we all realize, and gladly pledge our loyal support toward making it a permanent college event. 163 g Qauarter Gianturp uf Jeistury A RETROSPECT AND A FORECAST OUCHER COLLEGE was from its inception a union of things ancient and modern. Old World and New. Born of a desire to celebrate fittingly the American centenary of Methodism, the movement started in Oxfordis ivied quadrangle by him whom she terms H the most glorious scholar of Lincoln, Wesley, the Wycliffe of the eighteenth century, it was no wonder that this New-world memorial should take the form of a seat of learning. When one recalls, moreover, that the ancient University of Oxford was itself reared upon the earlier foundation of the nunnery of St. Frideswyde, it was all the more fitting that this memorial should become a college for women, and that in Baltimore, one hundred years after the organization in that city of the Methodist Episcopal Church in America, at the Christmas Conference of 1784. The project which was to prove so epoch-making in the lives of many women had its origin in the summer of 1883. At the following session of the Baltimore Conference held in March 1884 Dr John F. Goucher secured the endorsement of the purpose to create a school of highest college grade for women, provided $200, 000 were obtained before incorporation. This being procured by the Conference Committee, the College was incorporated January 26th 1885. The erection of the main building, now known by request of the Trustees as Goucher Hall, was proceeded with, and when completed was presented by Dr. Goucher as his initial gift to the institution. It was already apparent that the aesthetic scheme of the buildings was to set a pace in archi- tectural design as distinctive and symmetrical as were the new ideals it was sought to foster here. The impressive Romanesque structures in their fresh New-world setting typified curiously enough in the union of ancient and modern elements the very combination of classical and lattersday scientiiic features which the rising tide of educational demands was soon to make the approved standard for the work of this new institution. The majestic grey tower, counterpart of the campanile of old Ravenna which Hanks the group of college buildings, with its narrow defensive arrow- holes reminded the student of the feudal days, when it carried aloft to heaven the hopes and prayers of the people for deliverance. But it reminded her still more of her own new-born aspirations soaring high above narrow aim and small ambition in a desire for a knowledge of truth, of the earth beneath and the skies overhead, which the tall shaft so proudly pierced, shedding forth into the night of error and ignorance the illuminating rays of the cross, the Christian symbol of truth and light. When one recalled that the beautiful windows in the frieze. which light the interior of First Church from above, were copied from the mausoleum of Gallo Placidia, the daughter of Theodosius the Great, it was pleasing to trace a similar loving tribute in the circumstances that the outline of Goucher Hall was shaped in the form of the letter B, a memorial to the first beloved daughter of the founder. she who bore the same name, Eleanor, as did his mother. Into this temple of high ideals and classic symbolism was now gathered an eager company of earnest students. To induct them into its mysteries, Dr. William H. Hopkins had been called from the Presidency of St. Johns College in 1886. He organized the College after a year spent abroad in investigating the best facilities for the higher education of women. The institution opened its doors to students as the Woments College of Baltimore, September Inception Symbolism in Architecture 164 17th, 1888. The first chapel service was attended by forty-eight students, which number was increased to one hundred and forty by the end of the first year. The second year found the faculty grown from ten to twenty-one, while the students numbered two hundred and eighty-three. Bennett Hall and Home A were completed during this second year. Dr. Hopkins remained President until May, 1890, when he resigned to devote his attention to the Latin department. Dr. Goucher succeeded Dr. Hopkins and remained President until June, 1908. The principal buildings of the College rapidly increased in number until in addition to Goucher Hall and Bennett Hall, they included Bennett Hall Annex, Catherine Hooper Hall and the dormi- tories, Homes B and C, while Home D was opened in September, 1895. The naming of the halls, long a mooted question, finally evoked the unaccustomed names of Norse origin, Glintner, Fensal and Vingolf, though Wherein lay their special significance chis deponent saith not. 1892 The hrst class was graduated in 1892 with five members. The creative ability of these first graduates had already been demonstrated When the initial issue of Kalends appeared on May lst, 1890, a pamphlet of sixteen pages, price $1.25. Since it has increased to thirty-six pages, and the price has decreased to $1.00, it must be set down as one of the rare ii native productsii which has not advanced in price. It was for the pioneer Class of 92 that that most enjoyable of College functions, the First Alto Dale Day, was instituted June 4th, 1892, by the generous hospitality of Dr. and Mrs. Goucher. V. W. C. A. The College was speedily to the fore in social and beneiicent organizations, for the Young Womanis Christian Association was formed in January, 1894, and the College Settlement Association soon afterward in March. While it would be impossible to chronicle even the chief happenings of the happy years, full to overHOWing with ii current events, yet a few culled from the Hmernory booksi, of the pioneer years, when we were making history and tradition, will show not only how active was the organ- izing faculty, but how many were the notables who were glad to grace our balls with their stimulating presence. Note, for instance, the years 95 and ,96, when the initial steps were taken for many of our cherished organizations. Shortly after the second term of ,95 was ushered in we note the uDebating Club held its hrst debate on February 8th, on the question. HAre strikes justihable? ii and it was reassuring, though not altogether convincing, to learn that ii it was decided once and for all, that they were not.H The Club proved an excellent training school for the future debaters who founded Agora in 1899. The Board of Control, however, decided that there was more excellence in competi- tion, and proposed that Agora be divided into two rival societies, and that half-yearly scholarships be awarded the best parliamentarian and the best orator. Agora thus gave place to Boule and Ecclesia, March 24th, 1902, and as a result of their wholesome rivalry the College spread abroad in the land a skillful host of gavel-wielders and silver-tonged orators. Boule and Ecclesia were reunited into Agora again in 1910. To return, however, to the organizing days of 195, as February had brought into existence the Debating Club, so March ushered in the Basket-Ball team. The event of the month i' was, how- ever, the first concert by the Glee and Mandolin Club on the 22nd, and a great success it proved in every way.H The KiAnnual Junior BanquetH on May 30th shows that this unique function had already established traditions, while the H Senior Prom,H an innovation of 1895, soon changed its auspices to the debonair Southern Club, and became the vivacious social event known thereafter as the H Southern Prom. The event par excellence of this abounding year of grace 95 was, however, the advent of the first Donnybrook Fair, in honor of the Class of y96, and a prophetic event it proved to be, followed by the notable succession of similar triumphs in the realms of college art, poesy, literature and invention. A few weeks after College opened in the fall the Cloistered maidens of the Glee and Mandolin Club were permitted to make a much appreciated appearance at the Lyric, before the National Convention of the Womanis Christian Temperance Union. Their participation was royally returned when Miss Frances Williard, the St. Frances of modern womanhood, appeared in chapel shortly after and'aroused such keen interest on the subject of temperance that a zealous Somerset Y ii was formed. Agora Donnybrook Fair 165 The growing interest in athletics was stimulated by a Tennis Tournament between ,98 and 199, which gave the same zest to contests in the fall, which basket-ball produced in the spring. College Day which was first inaugurated in November, 1888, with an inspiring Keynote address by Dr. D. C. Gilman of Johns Hopkins was made notable in 1895 by the stirring message of Presi- dent Charles W. Eliot of Harvard, whose scholarly mien relaxed with much warmth and urbanity as the familiar strains of H Fair Harvard H greeted his ears from unwonted feminine voices as he entered Goucher Hall for the evening reception. Among other college presidents and notables who have appeared before the College in recent years have been President Wilson and ex-President Roosevelt. How varied were the programs of the College functions even at this early date is noted when one recalls two papers on U Dress H and H The Reign and Fall of Municipal Oligarchy in February, 1896, read by Mr. Charles J. Bonaparte before the infant Social Science Club which had been formed in 1892. Among the regretted H finals ll which occurred in May was the farewell reception to Dr. Frank Roscoe Butler under whose rare and scholarly leadership we had yearned to follow into all the high- ways and byways of literature, but Bostonis customary culture-lust had purloined him away to fill a more capacious chair in Boston University. It would be invidious to speak of the Faculty and the friends who are still with us, for they have given so much of themselves to us. that we feel they are indeed a part of our very selves. But we want to revert to a few of those whose names are fragrant memories; to Dr. Gorton the able mathematician, to Miss Agnes Lathe whose Vivid creative work in English and sparkling epigrammatic gifts made her removal from us a loss deplored in an unusual degree. Of one other who was removed from us a few years later, in 1902, we want to speak because without her womanly-wise counsel and sympathetic co-operation the high ideals and purpose of the founder would have lacked complete measure of fulfillment. It was to Mrs. Goucher that the Class of 198 dedicated its year-book, H as a token of our highest esteem and admiration ; 9 so they phrased it, a girlishly frank expression of the undisguised regard and reverence Goucher girls always felt for Mrs. Goucher, their true friend and loyal sponsor. Her lifevmessage was, in truth, HCredo, ii I believefi and no symbolism so typical of this purpose could have been bequeathed to us, as the radiant memorial window, made possible by her friends and the alumnae. Before the turn of the new century several events occurred which showed that the college fledgling had rounded out a dozen years and was prepared to present her gifts and graces in scenes of more activity and self-expression than the class-room. The history of Dramatics which begins about this time seems from contemporary accounts to have been a story of sudden and inexorable changes from pros to com and vice versa by a reluctant Dramatics Committee. After such strenuous reverses the actors came to excel, not only in the arts and graces of dramatic expression and stage management, but in the greater art of evolving H greatness ll from plays in which they had small choice, but which were perforce N thrust upon them.H The earliest attempts at histrionics were Sophomore Dramatics, the first play being ii The Rivals,H given in 1898 by the Class of 1900. In 1899 uA Russian Honeymoon ll was the program, in 1900 ii London Assurance? In 1901 the Class of 1903 gave UAs You Like ItH as Sophomore Dramatics, and the u Professorys Love Story ,l as a Junior Play. The Class of 1904 inaugurated the first Senior Dramatics, this time a Shakespearian play, NTwelfth Night? This skillful lead Was followed by 1905 in ii Much Ado About Nothingf and 1906 followed suit by conducting their devotees through the mazes of fairyland in ii Midsummer Nightls Dream.H The Class of 1907 introduced an innovation in the jovial comic opera H Robin Hoodfy and the scenes at Nottingham Fair and Sherwood Forest were very realistic. Besides the jolly HPilgrimage to Bayreuth,H offered the Seniors by the Class of 1908, they gave HAs You Like Itf' in their Senior year, with such success as to stimulate their sister-Class 1910 to entertain them with a rollicking parody phrased HAs WeldiLike It.H ' H Hiawatha,H given with much romantic effect on the bay shore by 1909 to 1907, was only excelled by the dramatic rendering of H Merchant of Venice 8 in the Senior year. Although 1910 thought itself hard-pressed, when u the tragedy which might so easily a comedy prove,H ii Romeo Tribute to Mrs. Goucher Dramatics 166 gamut of the Qtnllege Eutlbingz 167 and Juliet, was found to be their portion, they rose undismayed to the role and made it an artistic and emotional success. The classic beauties of Achilles in Scyros, rendered by 1911, and the mysteries of Milton's Comus, by 1912 in their Sophomore years, were the stepping-stones which led to the enchanted land of ii Midsummer Nightis Dream, so iinely portrayed by the former. and the choice rendition of H The Tempest by 1912 as Senior Dramatics. To this notable array of dramatic achievements the eagerly awaited appearance of 1913 in that prototype of the modern militant role of womanhood, ii Joan of Arc, H heroine of history and romance, proved a fitting supplement. Students Perhaps it was the ii pragmatic sanction l which had attended the choice of so many Organization plays, or perhaps it was but.a deniocratlc Sign of the tlmeshat all events a de51re for more self-government 1n aifairs which concerned them so intimately, led to the forma- tion of the Studentsy Organization, October 16th, 1905. As the College rounds out its first quarter century of history it is very natural to take account of stock and reckon its achievements and standing. By contrast with the first class of five members graduated in 1892, the largest class was graduated in 1904 with seventy-nine members, followed closely by 1910 with seventy-four members, while 1913 Will probably number over eighty graduates. The total number of graduates from the College, exclusive of the Class of 1913, has been 1,050. Of this number over 3570 are married, 27bi70 are teaching. about 570 are engaged in social and religious work, about 2V3 are engaged in business, and about 2870 are unmarried and engaged in no specific wage-earning occupation. Of the students attending the College 400i; have been from Maryland and the South, while the remainder have come from every State in the Union and eleven foreign countries. Of its graduates, 160, having received the B. A. degree, have continued their post-graduate studies for the second or third degree in the leading universities of Europe and America. While the College was founded under Methodist auspices it has served the interests of higher education With the broadest catholicity. Of the more than 2,350 students it has enrolled, nearly one-half or 5070 have been of Methodist affiliation, 1575 of Presbyterian, 1170 of Episcopalian, nearly 570 each of Baptist, Lutheran and Hebrew, and the remainder have been of twenty-four other denominations or of none. In 1908, upon the resignation of Dr. Goucher as President. he was succeeded by Dr. Eugene A. Noble, who resigned in June, 1911, and Dr. J. B. Van Meter was selected as Acting President until a permanent President be elected. Dr. Eleanor L. Lord succeeded Dr. Van Meter as Dean, in 1911. The charter was amended by Act of Assembly, March 3lst, 1910, and by the request of the Trustees the name of the College was changed from the Womanls College of Baltimore to Goucher College in recognition of the muniiicent gifts of Dr. and Mrs. Gaucher. which made the founding of the College a possibility and ensured its distinguished career. The enviable position the College has attained in its brief quarter century of history is notably set forth in the recent U Classification of the Universities and Colleges of the United States with reference to Bachelorls Degreesll by the Bureau of Education of the Department of the Interior, Washington. Rank ofCollege Of the 581 colleges and universities of the United States only fifty-nine have been placed in Class I, and Goucher College is one of these. Of the twenty-one leading womenls colleges only six are in Class I, and Goucher is one of these. Of the 185 colleges and universities south of Mason and Dixonls line only five are in Class I, and Goucher is one of the five, and is, moreover, the only woman's college of the five, thus taking first academic rank with the Johns Hopkins University, Vanderbilt University, the University of Virginia and the University of Texas. The highest recognized academic standing has been won by the youngest of woman's colleges with but twenty-four years of history, and with no endowment enabling it to rank with institutions of great reputation, long lineage and with millions of endowment to equip, establish and facilitate their labors. To what does the College owe its high standing and success? It is because it has done, not only the same work as the leading men's colleges and according to their standards, but because it has gone a step further and adapted its work in particular directions to womanis needs. It came J Change of Name 168 into existence foot-loose. tradition-free. It has conformed where conformity was wholesome, it has initiated where standards were lacking. Its advent was at a fortunate time when the standards of menls colleges were in a state of transitionwwhen they had begun to abandon the long inviolable schedule of classics, mathematics and philosphy and to open their doors to the invigorating tide of modern languages. history, literature and the natural sciences. From the multiplicity of studies outlined to meet the new needs was evolved the group system of related studies, the first scientific method of dealing with schedules, adopted by the Johns Hopkins University to secure students equipped for its special graduate work. Thus the Woman's College found the new methods of required work with the group system and electives rounded out a schedule of liberal culture with specialization, which, with her splendid pioneer work and fine equipment in Physical Training afforded a course of study far in advance of what had hitherto prevailed for womanls education. At the end of a quarter century is there still need for further evolution and adaptation? The significance of the careers of our College alumnae would seem to indicate that there is. The foresight which led her promoters to emphasize and co-ordinate physical training so that it became the basis of intellectual success assures her students that they will be no less willing to equip her for what is coming to be recognized as the co-equal demand of their domestic needs. Since one-third of our graduates are teaching or in business life, and two-thirds are home-makers, married or unmarried, the logical question arises, why should not more of womanls training serve to fit her in a greater degree for her special profession of homemaking? Women have demonstrated that they can amply fulfill the requirements of a curriculum adapted to menls needs and lifeework. They are now asking H Why may not college courses subserve in larger measure womanls needs and requirements? ll It is the question of the hour, and the college which solves the problem most wisely will serve the future woman student best. It is not that we love the old schedules less, but that we feel the need of their greater adaptation more. So women students are asking today, H Why may not more emphasis be placed on the industrial and domestic aspects of science? ll Why may we not study chemistry, not only as alchemy, but as related to life, the chemical composition of food, its nutritive values and methods of preservation, its relation to health, age and occupation? Why not physics in relation to sanitation? Why not art in relation to household decoration ? Why, in short, is a woman's education less cultural because more available, why less valuable because of more use? N The problems of the home and household, of food and clothing are organic parts of the world in which a woman especially must work out her destiny? Knowledge is power. In her equipment lies her ability to deal with her particular problems with skill and confidence, to master her vocation and not be mastered by it. As Goucher College has always served her daughters with light and leading, so we can rest well assured that she will measure up to new needs as they arise. And in the full measure of her great mission to educated womanhood, past and to comerwrnay her beloved shadow never grow less! Forecast R. M. 13.. 97. 169 Eistinguisbth alumnae 1893 EUPHEMIA MCCLINTOCK LL. D., honoris causa, University of South Carolina, 1911. President of College for Women, Columbia, 8. C.. 1902. CAROLINE BENSON TOWLES M.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1905. Practicing physician. Publications: 9 Calcium Metabolism with Special Reference to Exopthalmic Goitre, 1910; HMeta- bolism 0f Rachitis, 1911. 1894 ANNA BERTHA MILLER Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1912. Professor of Latin, XVellesley College, 1912. EMILIE ALLISON WAGNER Head of People's Music School ; manager of The Chil- dren,s Players, manager and leader of The Childrexfs Orchestra, New York City, 1900. 1895 MARY LAW MCCLINTOCK Ph. M., University of Chicago, 1902. Principal, Miss McClintock's School, Boston, 1908. FLORENCE PEEBLES Ph. D., Bryn Mawr College, 1900. Instructor in Sci- ence, Miss Wright's School, Bryn Mawr, 1911. LILY G. KOLLOCK Ours. Louis John Paetow, 191D Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1889. American Chemical Society. LAETITIA MORRIS SNOW Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1904. Associate Pro- fessor of Botany, Wellesley College, 1911. ' CLARISSA HALE SPENCER General Secretary for Worlst Committee, Young Womatfs Christian Association, 1904. 1897 AMY HEVVES Ph. D., University of Chicago, 1903. Professor of Ap- pliedEconomics and Sociology, Mt. Holyoke College, 1910. GERTRUDE BITZEL KNIPP Editorial Assistant, International Congress on Tuber- culosis, 1907. Executive Secretary, American Association for Study and Prevention of Infant Mortality, 1909. RUTHELLA BERNARD MORY 0Mrs. Arthur Barneveld Bibbins, 19031 Ph.M., University of Chicago, 1899. Author, UThe War of 1812 and u The City of Baltimore, 1797-1850 ,1 in the NHistory of Baltimore,H 1912; 11 Mammy ,Mongst the Wild Nations of Europe, 1904. Assistant Member of 1898 MAY LANSFIELD KELLER Ph. D., University of Heidelberg, 1904. Associate Pro- fessor of English, Gaucher College, 1906. President of Southern Association of College Women, 1912. ANNINA PERIAM 0Mrs, George Henry Danton, 19079 Ph. D., Columbia University, 1906. Author of Hebbers Nibelungen, Its sources, Method and Style, Columbia University Press, 1906. 1899 MARY ELIZABETH MORSE M.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1903. Pathologist to the New England Hospital for Women and Children, Boston, Mass., 1906. 1900 BERTHA MAY CLARK Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1907. Author of a Text-Book in Physics. Director of Science, William Penn High School, Philadelphia, 1907. MARGARET ROSELYN KOLLOCK Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1906. Instructor in History, Girls' High School, Philadelphia, 1900. 1901 ANNETTE BROWN HOPKINS Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1912. Instructor in English, Goucher College, 1911. 1903 EMILIE A. DOETSCH L1. B., Baltimore Law School, 1906. 1906. Practicing law, 1904 JESSIE YEREANCE CANN Ph. D., Columbia University, 1911. Head of Chemistry Department, Rockford College, 1911. First woman to receive Ph. D. in Chemistry at Columbia University. MARGARET SHOVE MORRISS Instructor in History, Mt. Holyoke University, 1908. EMMA PETERS SMITH A. M., Columbia University. 1909; Secretary of Gradu- ate Women of Columbia University, 1911. 1905 MARY T. HOGUE Ph. D., University of VVurzburg, 1909. Zo610gy, Mt. Holyoke College, 1911. 1906 ETHEL NICHOLSON BROWNE Ph. D., Columbia University, 1913. Assistant in Bio- logical Laboratory and Research Work, Princeton Uni- versity, 1912. Instructor in 1The compilers of this list of Alumnae who have done distinguished work since leaving college cannot hope to have the list complete, but it has been made as up-to-date and comprehensive as possible.-EDITORS. 170 erecting from mass imminents ANNA HEUBECK KNIPP Ex-President of Alumnae Association 1892 My dear Classmates of '92, Do you remember, that, when we were be- ing teased for our slowness in getting a class flag, Dr. Gaucher came to our rescue by say- ing - The class of '92 is one whose loyalty never flags. His remark has proved to be prophetic, as well as temporarily comforting and I am proud to be the president of a class, every one of. whose members has contributed to the Endow- ment Fund. Cordially yours, ANNA HEUBECK KNIPP 1893 Yokohama, J apan To the Class of '93-Greeting-s, To see you all and give you each a hearty handshake would be a great pleasure and I hope it will be a reality next J une. The years have been very full for some of us and there havebeen many changes in all our lives. but the old days at Gouchet stand out in my memory as clearly and beautifully as Fujiyama did tonight in the glorious sunset. Very sincerely yours. GRACE GRIFFING HOEN Greetings to you, Class of ,93, and from '93 greetings to all Gaucher women everywhere. Twenty years ago we left our Alma Mater, full of her spirit for noble living. We have had many discouragements, even failures, but looking back today we see much that has been worth while and much to encourage to future striving. For both we give our Alma Mater deepest thanks. May she go on, triumphant thro this year of trial, to serve and blocs. CAROLINE WILSON SWEEZY 1894 In the annals of college history we read of '94 that it was a class -above all loyal to the Woman's College of Baltimore. Let us be proud of this, and may the coming years prove that our class poet was insnired when she sang of Alma Mater: She shall have forevermore Grateful hearts and true devotion And the love of ninety-four. J OHNETTA VAN METER 1895 To the Class of 1895wGreeting, The eighteen years have passed swiftly and. I hope, happily. Some have realized their ambitions, others found places not in accord with youthful dreams. May we learn further of lifels secretmeanings from its joys and sorrows, its pleasures and pains as we pass on. Very sincerely, ELIZABETH Cox PIPER 1896 Dear Friends of N inety-six, It is very difficult to send greetings in a few words, after six- teen years of Separation. Aren't you proud that Donnybrook Fair is celebrating her eighteenth birthday. when you realize that '96 start- ed her on her career? Let us hope that there may be many more; and wish, at this twenty-flfth anniversary of Gaucher, Long life to our College of fair Baltimore. ELIZABETH B. MATHEWS 1897 To the Class of '97, My greeting to you, is a little message of thanksgiving. There is no place so small, but there is room for a woman to be a woman in it, and these are great times to be a. woman, in any place-wherever you are, whatever you are doing, God blas you. EMMA GEORGE HEMINGWAY 171 I extend, through Donnybrook Fair, my mosticordial greetings to my sisters of the Alumnae of Gaucher Collese-a greeting from the most ancient of the ancients of '92 to all the generations that have followed, especially to the hedglings of 1913 and 14. KATHERINE H. HILLIARD Ex-President of Alumnae Association 1898 Dear Classmates, My message to you on this twenty-fifth anniversary of our College 13 to bid you recall the happy years we spent together there and always to be proud that you are alumnae of Gaucher. Both to you and to the College I ex- tend my best wishes for the future BLANCHE G. REISINGER 1899 Salaams and best wishes from the Near East to all '996rs! Whether watching a new republic grow in old China, guiding aspiring winds in Lucknow, awaiting the fortunes of war on the Euxine or inhuencing public opin- ion in a Presidential election year may our watchword,' Mehr Licht , never dim. Yours, in bonds of '99 ELIZABETH BARROWS Ussx-mn 1900 It is indeed a pleasure to send through Don- nybrook, a line of greeting to the girls who went hopefully forth to tomorrow in quest of the self it 15 best to be. IClass song 19001 May that quest have led us every one to regard life as an opportunity for service-to make giv- ing, not getting, our ideal.' ' Faithfully your friend, MARY C. C. HAYES 1901 Would you ask us why we love, This our class, so tenderly, Holding her so far above All who would her rivals be'! Is she brave, victorious, Has she deeds of valor done? We would answer, Glorious Is our Class of 1901! And I think of each one of you, contributing ever, as you udoe ye nexte thynge , your share towards making true to-day, in a larger, broader, finer sense, the boost of College Days. And to you all, and to your children, whether of your brain, or those others, 'so like their dear Father , I send a greeting full of the gladness of being one of such a class. Yours in 1901, J ANET GOUCHER MILLER 1902 A greeting to the girls of Nineteen Hundred and Two, the fifty- four loyal daughters of Goucher who, throughout the States, in the Phllippines, in India and in China, represent their Alma Mater. To the twenty-nine husbands and thirty-seven small men and women adopted into the class within the last ten years, we send a cordial greeting. And from us all to the undergraduates who are privileged to have their College days at Goucher, here are heartieet good wishes and con- gratulations. FRANCES ROWLAND CORNER 1903 Dear Classmates of 1903, May the enthusiasm which belonged to our class while' 111 col- lege, have kept us interested in all that has been worth while' ' in the life around us during the ten years since we left our loved Alma Mater. may it actively interest us in her welfare now, and bring many of us back to her for our class reunion in J llne 1913. ALICE DUNNING FLICK 1904 To the Class of 1904, It has been ten years since 1904 published its Donnybrook Fair and each year since then there has been a Donnybrook expressing the same labor and devotion as ours did. While we are busy with our activities let us not for- get that the College life which We lived is going on just the same. Our College still lives and calls to us to share its life. Long life to our College of fair Baltimore! CARRIE MAE PROBST 1905 Although the class of 1905 is unusually scattered, these words may reach some distant member, to whom, together with those nearer home, I wish to extend the best of good wishes and ask that each one may plan to be at the re- union in 1915. NELLIE SNOWDEN WATTS 1906 To the Class of Nineteen Six who, with their stanch Honorary Member, Dr. Froelich- er, have pledged their loyalty' 1n an enduring circle of friendship and love- most hearty greetings. MAY SMITH 172 Greetings to all the daughters of our Alma Mater, each in her sphere of service! What can be a greater opportunity for us, as college women. than the next generation? More than half of us are teachers or mothers. It is a great thing to have a noble character. iIt is a great thing to bea real thinker. But it is a greater thing to plant your thoughts in intellects where they will grow, ahd to put your principles, which have made character, into hearts where they will be cherished.' So may the next generation reaect our inspiration from our Alma Mater! 1907 Dear 1907, As the children in Maeterlinckis Blue Bird could turn their Magic Diamond, and betransport- ed into the Land of Memory, so we can turn our thoughts and enter the rich beautiful Land of 1907 Memories. Tho we love to tarry here, we must not forget the 1907 Land of the Future. Unlike the children with the diamond, we have not the power to behold this land but we can anticipate it, and realize that ere long, almost as thru magic, it will become the Land of the Present. May we all come together for our reunion in 1917. Yours loyally, MARY V. ROBINSON 1908 Greetings to the Class of 1908, It is with peculiar pleasure that I extend greet- ings to the members of the Class of 1908, for we celebrate this year not only the Twenty-iifth Anniversary of our be- loved Alma Mater but the fifth year reunion of our illustrious class. May we gather from the corners of the earth to receive new in- spiration and pledge again our love and loyalty to Goucher College, and to the Class of 1908. Loyally, LUCIA SLOAN 1909 The Class of 1909 sends hearty greetings to trustees, faculty. stud- ents and alumnae. on this twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of our college. May Goucher look forward to many more quarter cen- turies of usefulness and service to young women, and may its infiu- ence continue to grow as it has during the last twenty-iive years. KATHARINE LINDSAY ANGELINE GRIFFING WOLF, '98 President of Alumnae Association 1910 Dispatch Hashed to the Class of 1910 on her third birthday by Donnybrook Wireless: Greetings to every member of the class, and the sincere wish that the coming year may bring with it all the happiness you have ever wished for and the realization of your fondest hopes and ambi- tions. Good luck and iauf wiedersehn' in 1915. LOUISA DOETSCH 1911 Greetings, Alma Mater, we extend our felicitations to you upon your ob- taining to your twenty-fifth year of useful life and purposeful work. This space is scarcely suiiicient to express all that we hope for you- may our lives be an expression of that. Your daughters of 1911, ROSE KAHN, President 1912 Greetings to each and every member of 1912 I And may all the years to come record for you as much happiness, as much unselfish service, and as great loyalty to your Alma Mater as this, your first year away from her, has shown. Faithfully yours. ERNESTINE DULANEY 173 DONNYBROOK FAIR As we introduce our readers to the delights of the Donnybrook Fair of 1914, we think it well that they should know a little concerning the nature of the real Irish fair for which'our book is named. Not far distant from the great city of Dublin is a little village, familiarly known as Donny- brook. For many years it was the custom in this quaint old hamlet to hold on the Village green in the closing days of August an old time county fair, offering the same attractions to the dwellers in the surrounding country as the many fairs held annually in the rural districts of America afford at the present day. Here were gayly decorated booths with provisions for eating and drinking. Here merry boys and girls took delight in showing forth their skill in the mastery of the diHicult steps which constitute the Irish jig. while grey-headed grandfathers and grandmothers gazed with admiration, not unmixed with envy, at the double shufHe of the heel and toe. A half-century ago the H Fair ceased to be an institution in Ireland, and since that time Donnybrook has become one of the most charming and aristocratic suburbs of Dublin. The HFairH has been idealized by time and is now far-famed in song and story as a place of wit and humor. MOTHER GOOSE RHYMES tAdaptedl There was a poor proctor who lived down on hrst, Goosey, goosey, gander, She had so many children she thought each was the worst. Whither shall I wander? She shld them and shld them and sh'd them ytis said, Up-stairs, down-stairs. And kept right on shling till they all were in bed. To some deserted chamber. There I met a proctor, Who said tt To chapel go, Or em I took the dread alternative, And ran out in the snow. There was a girl in our school, And she was wondrous wise. She wore no heels upon her shoes- Shoes of a wondrous size. She screwed her hair up into a knot With all her might and main, And all because she hoped she might An A in Hygiene gain. Sing a song of Faculty, Our dear profs, full of wit. Ten and thirty learned ones, Now only think of it I When they sit in chapel, They all begin to singI Arenlt they a lovely sight, G one and two they make me blue, Too sweet for anything? And Solid is as bad. That old Livy perplexes me, And C one drives me mad! The dean is on the platform, Singing loud and clear, Hoppyls by the organ, No rival need he fear ; Oh, Oh, Blackshear! Hans is on the front Tow, Did I pass or flunk? Just hear his bass ring out, But therels the end of that poor hymne Well miss, well miss, Hark! how HAmen they shout! Your work was rather punk. One question pretty bad, And one you didnlt know, And onels just awful, Ride a cock-horse to Bennett-Hall-Cross To see fair Miss Killinan vault over the horse. She holds with her lingers and kicks with her toes, So you're just a bit below. With a run-yumpeand presto! Over she goes. 174 THE CHRONICLE OF THE TWELVE VIRGINS 1. And it came to pass in the fullness of time, that the spirit of Daring came mightily upon the Donnybrook Board, and they waxed exceedingly bold. 2. And they girded themselves in their ephodSeyea, in varicolored ephods. And they wentfortlz to the conflict: They went forth for Ads. 3. And the order of their march was two by two. 4. And when they had come to the southernmost bounds of flu: tz'ty they stood upon the plains of Down town. 5. And they were gathered together. And they said one to another : Lo! who shall ascend unto the high places? For we would have leaders. 6. Then they cast lots. 7. And when the lots were cast, there were chosen from their num- ber two valorous mes; the zeal of their cause was mightily upon them. 8. And they went unto a tall building, and ascended unto the high placeSeyea, even unto the fifth floor. 9. And when they had found him whom they sought, they said 7 unto him: 10. Lo! my lord, look upon uSeeven upon us, and favor uSefor we would have an ad. 11. And he said : what are ye to me? I will have none of you? 12. And he was exceeding wroth. 13. Then the gift of prophecy came upon them, and they prophesied wondrous things. AND 5221': ?;. mm 14. And they said unto him: Lo! if you will give us an Ad, you w i shall gain much business, and great shall be your joy thereat. 15. Then he heard them. 16. And he said : What recompense claim ye? 17. And they answeredeLo ! three heaps of money : 18. The one heap shall contain five one dollar bills: 19. And the second heap shall contain five one dollar bills: 20. And the third heap shall contain one five dollar bill. 21. And after he had drawn apart and contemplated, he did unto them even as they asked. 22. And when they had received the spoils, they opened the door and fled, and tarried not, 23. But returned unto their own country-even unto the land called Goucher. 24. And the rest of the acts of the Donnybrook Board, and all that they did, are they not written in the book of chronicles of the Tribe of 1914? l 1ND, nil, MID nu. an 175 GIENE Giene, Hygiene, keep your hands quite clean, And your water free from bugs; Donlt you know it is wrong to use unboiled milk For fear of cocci and germs and their ilk, And to drink from public mugs? Giene, hygiene, you must skin that bean And boil the baby too. Don't you know you must eat only twice a day, If you will live long eat but curds and whey, And give the fly a shoo. Giene, hygiene, if you will be clean, Wash your hair about twice a day, And in antiseptic boil your face, If yould not be cast into dreadful disgrace, And keep that cat away ! Ifrkw Tun v r1 ?FMK w-Iw actual ngrhi h... ,f Till havx fkm skur lvxhv TAT LU -w A MATTER OF FEELING I picked out the seat in the corner that day, Where in glumness I sat out of everyone's way. My senses were drowsy-my brain was a blank, I thought that the lesson toh, pardonD was I was tired, I was bored Uor I rose with the dawni;Y rank. The skeleton hung by a rope near the door. It had swung by that rope twenty years and some more. It had rocked in the breeze of that hygienic room, Instead of enjoying its rest in the tomb. It was tired, it was bored, and it wished it was gone, And expressed all its feeling in one great, long yawn. u Creak-click. And I uttered my feelings in one great, long yawn. tlAhium. But a thundering voice made my eyes open quick, And my back straighten out like a twenty yard stick. And I saw to my horror, as you may suppose, What it was that made Lizziels mouth open and close! My feeling for her was instantly gone. 'Twas the hand of the doctor that caused that great yawn ! t t Boom-boom. t ' 176 Ir TILT Curmll CAUSED BY '1'2 ii I never saw a purple cow, 1 never hope to see one; But I can tell you anyhow. Iid rather see than be one. But worse than any purple cow, Worse than a crimson goose, Is the Progressive emblem now: It is a T blue bull moose. eAdaptedfrom U Lifef But if you really want to see The worst that can be seen, Just watch the wondrous antics of A donkey that is green! Now any one who takes T2 Can talk of politics, About those wicked Democrats, And Woodrow Wilsonis tricks. CLASS IN R1 Time-9 A. M. Tuesday. Place-Anatomy Laboratory. For we have learned from morn till noon, From noon till dewey eve, Of Roosevelt and high tariff, What Third Partyites believe. We know all Teddyis wondrous deeds, And how heill make fur fly, When m he gets into othce In the sweet bye and bye! The color of his eyes and hair, And smile we learn about, And, if he even sneezes Why,ewe get an extra out. And if he'd only come to Goucher, We know how pleased he,d be To see the great Bull Mooser here In our own faculty. The 9 o'clock bell rings and the Tuesday morning Anatomy Lab. section hurries up the stairs. Miss King, standing over by the blackboard calls the roll amid the shuinng of chairs and excited Whispering. Miss King-As the-er-notiee on the bulletin board said we will-er-have an oral quiz on the-ah- nervous system this morning instead of the usual laboratory. tThe girls look resignedly at each other. Miss King slowly picks out one of the numerous papers in her handJ Miss Wooledge, What are the two classes of nerve fibers found in the Amphioxus and Petromyzon. Miss Waoledge-I-I donit know. Miss King twith a reassuring smilei-O, yes. Iim sure you do. Canit you tell from this? tShe holds up a wonderfully made chart covered with various green, blue and yellow lines ending in shootsl Miss Woolea'ge eriggling nervouslyi-No-o. Miss King tsadlyieNext, please, Miss Kerrick. Miss Kerritk tnervouslyiwAreniteI thought-the yellow and blue ones are the two kinds, arenit they? tThen feeling disapproval in the air she murmursi I donit know. Min Kingr-Miss Martsolf. Miss Martsolf tgliblyieThe one kind carries impulses from the sense organs to the C. N. S.; the other kind carries impulses from the C. N. S. to the various organs. nize Hill in the answerJ Miss King twith a somewhat relieved smileiwAnd what are their names? Miss MartstoeWhy I donit believe I exactly remember. Oh, isn't one of them the rami communicans? Hanzschei . 1111's: KingeMiss Janney, can you tell us? 17111:: fanney teagerly but with a seeming appearance of modestyi-They are motor and sensory. 177 Iim afraid not. tSome of the class recog- tThen with a sudden inspirationJ tBored looks from Misses Janney, Thurlow and tShe tells all there is to know about these nerves tracing their stupendous development through the various stages of evolution since the Periclean Age. The class sits by delighted, watching the time slip byJ Miss King twith a sigh of reliefleYes, that is it. tShe turns to the blackboard and goes over the whole subject again With fascinating illustrations. Hester King in the back of the room nods her head vigorously at each telling point. In the midst of the explanation Dorothy Wilson holding on to her hat-pins tiptoes up the stairs and peeps around the corner. Not seeing Dr. Welsh she settles her hat firmly on her head and walks boldly into the room. During her efforts to get to the only vacant chair, the class breaks into roars of laughter at her audible remarks. After the commotion has subsided Miss King slowly picks out the next question from her papersJ Miss RogerSnDr. King, do you believe that a-that a man came from a monkey? tWith a deprecating giggle. I-I don,t think so, but I wanted to know what you think. The class roarsJ Miss King tgentlyI-Well, Miss Rogers, I really don't believe we'd better discuss that this morning as the time is getting short. tLooking at GenevieveQ How is a message transmitted from the periphery to the corpuscallosum? IIWiss AlcCoslz-I don't understand the question, Miss King. Miss King-I mean in just what way is an impulse to the corpus collosum brought about by the peripheral neurons. Miss McCoslz-Why, that was just what I was going to ask you, Miss King. 1Wz'ss King tsmiling sadlyI-Well, Miss Sparks, can you explain to Miss McCosh. Miss Sparks-No, Miss King, I canit. Miss King tnervously turning to Miss Thurlow as a last resortI-Can you, Miss Thurlow. Miss Thurlow-Yes, Miss King, you see it is like this. When that sensory nerve tpointing dramatically to the Charo or, as I should really say, its dendrites approach the contiguous processes of the motor-neurous, the adaptability of the fibers of the neuro-muscular structures causes them to become excited and the impulse passes thru the commissural fibers by means of the motor-pyramidal tract into the corpus callosum. tThe class listens impatiently to this harangue, only a few catching glimnierings of meaningJ Miss King-Now do you see, Miss Sparks, and you, Miss McCosh? Miss Hanzsclze tquicklyi -Dr. King! Alix: IGngnYes, Miss Hanzsche. Miss Hanzsclzeel just wanted to ask you about the psychological effect of consciousness being awakened by metaphysical concepts and the hypothetical relation of this subconsciousness to the convolutions of the cerebrum. tA lively discussion follows between Misses King and Hanzsche, while the class tries to look intelligent and fails utterlyJ Miss King-Are-er-there any more questions? ZVliss Hier twho has been giving most of her attention to the fun going on down in the gme- VV-would you mind explaining to me h-how a message gets between two nerves? Do they touch? tThe class bursts out laughingl. lWiss King tin a pathetic toneIeThat has all been explained once this morning, Miss Hier. Zliiss llzer tblanklerOh, has it? I didn,t hear anything about it. Miss Kz'ng-Look at this chart, Miss Hier, and I will go over it again. I dont suppose it will even do any harm to all Of you to hear this a second time. tAppreciative smiles on all the faces. In the midst of the explanation, the bell rings. E. Osterstock, D. Wilson and B. Ross Who are in a hurry to get on their caps and gowns and get to chapel, fidget nervouslyJ Miss King tsighingI-Well, I suppose I shall have to stop for today. I hope youlll all do better for Dr. Welsh. 178 CS -. sgentlc good Rumour: makes Life. sweet 179 R1 LAB. First Soph. Cooking at human brainy-Do we have to draw this under the microscope? Second Sophelf it was yours I am afraid we should have to, my dear. WHICH WAS THE BRIGHTER? J. Fulton tdelightedly, on the l lbridge , ' after chapelle I got A minus in history! B. ROSSe-Well, if you donit hurry, we'll 13 minus in Bible. SAVED FOR US Dr, BlacksheargNitrous acid is very powerful for heart troublevin fact I was almost overcome by it myself some years ago. FOR RENT Dr. Abel-I have placed you alphabetically, and your seats will be an indication if you are present or not. If your seats are vacant, you are vacanteer absent. May we add a query? What happens when you are vacant in 59? Miss Probst tcalling the roll in T3, and receiving a varied replyeAre you here, or absent? DOUBTFUL Dr. Hopkins-What dative is this? head for you. McCosthative of Service! 111 break your 0 JOY! Bright Junior-What are you looking for? Anxious it Ec StudenteBliss. Bright Junior-Canlt you be satisfied with happiness? J. Stude tin FQ-He was bored to death with 12 bullets. Horrible death, that! ORIGINATOR OF SOUTHERN uPROM CO Dr. B.eMiss Wooldridge, tell us what you know about Aristotle. Miss W. tafter some hesitationy-Why-a-a Aristotle had four things andeandel canit remember what they werewandqand tafter deep thougthh', yes, he spent much time walking around a grove. OUCH! Dr. FroelichereiiMiss Brown, when you eat, what do you have? W. Browneu Pleasure. Dr. F.-HAnd if you keep on eating? Ii W. Brown-HA pain. HER MAJESTY Grace T. LewiswH You all hush talking! Me all wants to talk. Yes, she belongs to the P. A.A. Librarian tto worried looking studenDeWhat may I do for you? Anxious student-May I get Greene and Peele? THE SPIRIT OF DEMOCRACY Miss Sharogrodsky had just iinished reciting a poem in English class. Miss Tupper---H Whom is that by? Miss S.-u William Jennings Bryan. Miss Tupper-H You mean William Cullen Bryant, don't you? Miss Sell Oh, yes! But isn't there a man by the name of William Jennings Bryan in Baltimore? Sorry! But he moved out last June. THE MODERN CONCEPTION All studies were done, and the girls were sitting around idly passing the time. it Lets read a story, suggested one. uYes. Letis do,H all agreed. NLetls read 'Beowulf.' it Oh! !I exclaimed Romberger, do read it. love those Uncle Remus stories. I just ttFIRE! I, Marjorie Day came up to gym. the other day in a great hurry with a few stray locks of hair hanging down in her eyes. She succeeded in putting the finishing touches to her costume and getting in line in time to answer to her name. Then she almost broke up the class. For glancing up, she was terrified and almost terrified Miss Kallman. ll Look! Sparks! she exclaimed. u Never mind, Marjorie, exclaimed a kind friend pushing her hair back out of her eyes. RED LETTER DAY FOR GOUCHER The above statement may be misleading to some, and cause false expectations. We do not refer to the date on which the last dollar of the Million Dollar Fund was raised, nor do we mean that day of the week when the assembled Titians caused that pleasant glow in chapel, though it does concern one of their number. This red letter day was Tuesday, December 2nd, 1912. It was on that memorable date that Dr. William Kellicot attended chapel. Whether this was his first offense this year we are not prepared to say, but we will vouch for the fact that it is one of a very few. For whether it was Uthe angels in heaven above, or the demons down under the sea,H a voice kept calling, UWilliam! William!H all doing the services. Evidently HWilliam heeded the call, and has been conspicuously absent ever since. 180 Elijah asleep under a juniper tree SLEEP Sleep, who feeleth not thy power? Not me, alone, it seeks to cower. It holds me when the seven-thirty bell, Awakes the morning echoes in the HL. At every step advancing with the day, It gains oter me a more relentless sway. At length at chemistry lecture its command Doth surely win the upper hand. Experiments, explosions, shake the power, But it returneth at the evening hour. STRANGE! Up in Miss Morsets dominions, Where they learn Baby Physics, you know, Sat the Sophomore,s dreamily wondering How the waves of light ought to go. With lenses convex and a candle, With lenses concave and a screen, They were catching the candle's refiection, Then asking-iiWhat should I have seen? H One maiden, tired but persistent Was almost through for the day, She was anxiously bent oter her candle, Viewing it with greatest dismay. She was breathing heavily, slowly, Her nose to the candle quite near, When another Sophomore questioned: HWhy on earth are you acting so queer? She looked up annoyed at the question, Drew breath, then said in despair, HDirections say, iNow snuff the candles,, But really there,s no queer smell there! 181 ANATOMOCKY lTwas R, and the vertebrae Did lumbar region in the spine; A11 costal was the cartilage And the heating ribs in line. HBeware the saprophyte, my Sohp., The germs that kill, microbes that bite, Beware the streptococci bold, And shun the parasite.yy She took her microscope in hand, Long time the sceptic foe she sought; Then rested she by the left bronchi, And stood awhile in thought. And as in trachea thought she stood, The saprophyte with eyes of fiame, Came pathogenic through the tube, And microbed as it came. C02, C02, and through and through, The cilia went lashing up; She left the strife, and with a knife, Anatomized a pup. t tAnd hast thou drawn the saprophyte? Come to my radius ulna grasp! Oh, dextrose pride, dissoccharide! ,3 She enzymed with a gasp. tTwas R, and the vertebrae Did lumbar region in the spine, All costal was the cartilage And the floating ribs in line. km: Mahatma awn; m h; 1- y- ALICE IN BLUNDERLAND Wearily Alice leaned back in her chair and gazed yawningly ceilingward. Would exams. never end? And would the weather never cease to be at a broiling point? She certainly would be glad when vacation came. Well, it was no time to muse, for she was due at her' exam. in live minutes. She gave the last, final despairing look at her notebook and trotted Goucherward in the hoty drowsy air that was anything but inductive to thought. Why, how funny! The door to Goucher was closed and there was 110 knob on it, but instead was a Red String fastened by some peculiar manner in its place. After hesitating for some time, Alice picked up courage and the Red String at the same time and opened the Portals of the House of Knowledge. But it seemed to be awfully dark inside and so unreal. Her feet were getting involved in some way and she had just bumped into something that moved. Blinking she looked up and discovered Dr. Welsh standing there, talking earnestly about the Woman's Campaign to Dr. Blackshear. Why, she was in evening dress, and it was her train that had ensnared Alice's feet. After profuse apologies, Alice continued her way, slowly and cautiously 11p the stairs. HPistll' just as she got to the top, a horrible monster sprung out at her, and quickly dis- appeared again, after making some awful contortions of his body and wrigglings of his nose which was shaped like a question mark. Alice hardly had time to catch her breath when a weird little old gentleman, a book under each arm, came up to her from the side. He had the same sort of nose as the other creature, but not the same, wicked gleam in his eyes. Politely taking off his hat, he asked Alice if he might walk along. with her. HWho are you?H she inquired in a rather frightened voice, her eyes intent upon the gentle- manls nose. liWhy, I am Mr. Quizzf announced Quizz, ii My brother, Sprung Quizz, just passed you.H llWell, he most scared me to death. I dontt like his manner at all. In fact, I can't say I like you very much. iKHaI ha! You are at least frank in your statements. Well, we know we arenlt popular With the young ladies, but there,U pointing ahead to a party of people, who seemed to be listening attentively to some speaker, Hare some people who do like us. H Dr. Abel is having a party and is entertaining her guests by reading an extract from her latest book, regarded as an authority in 83 on the American Indian. Wonlt you come join the priviledged ones?, In an impressive voice, Dr. Abel was informing her audience concernin g the native American. HItls a fact of historical interest, i Revealed by ardent research That the Indian never wore trousers, And never went to church. Well, this certainly was above her, and she didnlt see any use in staying and listening any longer. She had to hustle on or she would be late for that exam. Why the door to the room wouldnlt open! She couldnlt undertake that. Oh, there was a Teapot. She would ask how to try to open it. U My dear Teapot But upon the mention of the word, the Teapot drew up haughtily and looked through and past Alice. She immediately felt small enough to crawl through the key-hole. This seemed to be the easiest way of escape, so she did it. She was just beginning to feel normal again when a loud toot made her turn quickly around. HA whistle I ,' she exclaimed. 11 182 Her progress in growth was checked. She felt herself shrinking under the cold stare of the whistle. To add to her discomfort, the whistle gave a loud puff and blew her out again. She was beginning to get indignant. You might think she were a basket-ball. Besides, if she were knocked around much longer, all the knowledge would be shaken out of her before she got to that exam. Maybe she was mistaken in the date and it wasnlt to be that day. My! what a commotion on the H bridge. It seemed to be a festal day around Goucher, and she was the only one looking for work. Oh, horrors ! A Pie and a Fork were wildly running her way, pursued by a huge monster with flowing robes. Heavens! the thing was coming after her too. and she joined in the race. Through Goucher, down Twenty-third Street, across Charles they sped. Alice Wished one of those numerous automobiles would appear and run the monster down. But no such luck ! On up Maryland Avenue, the thing followed her with dogged steps. She was getting tired and was going to stop. Just as she turned to grasp it, it eluded her. ll What do you want? ll demanded Alice who was hot in mind as well as body. ll I am the Spirit of Democracy. I pursue everyone, but nobody can touch me.H u Well, you can just stop pursuing me. I am tired. Scat.H ' Baffled, the spirit fled, resuming her search for the Pie and the Fork. H Old scarecrowfl exclaimed Alice. H Now I never can take that exam. Guess I might as well go home and cool off. ll Clang! clang! clang! ll Just as she got in the middle of Maryland Avenue, fire engines appeared, coming at a gallop down the street. One was coming straight towards her, and she was paralyzed ! She couldnlt move ! Clang! clangl ,' insistently beat the gong. Alice awoke with a start. The bell was ringing. She looked quickly at her clock. Pshaw! It was the eight olclock bell, and she had missed breakfast. A Plea for Uleful as well as Artistic Statuary in Gaucher Hall 183 a h . The Ruba'nyit of DA: 9- The ban no question makes ofsyes am! nose but 156M: am! 16H,$hikl;16 the plays r; Goes; Yet she who Tossed it up into the Itch ,She Know: about it all -she howsfhe kmws' RE-M ORSE I didntt know the number of the atoms That are within 200 pounds of lead. I couldntt calculate to 50 decimals, The number of cubic meters in my head. I couldntt tell how many times each winter, His prayers, Sir Isaac Newton used to say, Or, if the Dean would rage for half an hour, How many calories hetd throw away. I didn't know if Archimedes always tt Eureka! cried wheneter he took a bath. 1 could not measure the electric currents In French or Bible, Ec or Psych or Math. I could not say these things that other maidens Could rattle off so glibly in that course, And so, although Pd rather die than take it, My next year's science work will be Re-morse. $ t . J , The nuba'aya't of the Hand. Freshman. VIM -'wiUiaut askmr, cher hurrfed whence Ardlwithouf askinqwhhher humei hemee? 0 may a cap of next ar's Freshman class Must nun the Tnehuny of that ihSolence. MARY HAD A LITTLE CAT Mary had a little cat, She loved it very dearly ; The howls that cat emitted drove The neighbors crazy, nearly. So she carried it to school one day And gave it to R2, And now that kittyts far away, Where back-yard wails are few. One took his nervous system out, One took his heart and lung, They made nice slides of his little insides And pieces of his tongue. Maryts kittyts gone away ; If youtd know where to find it, Look underneath that microscope, See what it left behind it. :nrh-t ,, 13,5 Ekamt l:hb.t,1lu. amine m a t-h-hl 1M , tnmvrawn- wa MM Inl-v-a n4 n4... want Th. Remm .t'Lma m. nun. Shujglc. uu L, 1-H A gant w..o..;LI-.I.I-u 15a u. hm tsu R. hm g..- wk um THE CHAMBER OF M H M? R 0 'R S 184 CHEMISTRY CLASS uThat's all for to-day! Good-bye, good-bye! H Just hear the happy gymnites cry. HItls 2.45, alas, alas, Iill be late for chemistry class. Here I've run clear up to third floor. My dressing roomwh, what a bore ! Itls way down near the swimming pool. Oh, plague upon this awful rule, of always being on time for school! 0h, wherels my sleeve and collar-pin? Itis time for Charlie to begin, Here I gOe-hurray, hurray ! I thought Ild never get away; Well, here I am on Katie's third 1100:, But wherels my bookithis one blow more? I shall collapse upon the spot, My note-book,s over in gym! Ilm not! A PARODY Cram, cram, cram, For the many exams. to be. It is well that I do not utter The thoughts that arise in me. Oh, well for the happy young damsel Who says she thinks college is play, For she is the lucky person Who has only one quiz in a day. And that same girl goes calmly on, And knows not the awful jam, Of facts in the mind of a student, Who has six exams. to cram. Cram, cram, cram, For the many exams. to be ! For the great good luck of but one exam. Was a luck not meant for me. When your ayirit is troubled come here to calm it A DREAM 'Twas the night before midyears, and all through the hall, Each maiden was studying, fat, short and tall. My note-book was finished and lay on the table. I'd toiled many hours to suit Dr. Abel. When straight through the door, each armed with a knife, There filed twenty girls, I feared for my life! They looked not at meeit was not their design To endanger my life, but to crib my S9. On the table, greet guns! could it be a mistake? Instead of $9 lay a huge chocolate cake! Astounded, I stared as each girl cut a slice, Saw them turn, leave the roomeas quiet as mice. And gazing with horror on what had been mine, I saw in its place-only crumbs of S9. 185 Keep Step! THE QUALITY OF SOUP The soup we have for luncheon is not strained. ,Tis filled with rice and corn, tomatoes; too, And carrots orange-hued. It is twice served ; It came to us last week, and new today. It brings to us a message. It tells us Of that meat bone that went out Tuesday night Into the kitchen and ne'er more was seen- The bone that filled our hearts with doubt and dread, As oft we wondered when ltwould come again. But here it is at last, here in the soup- That soup so fair with cauliflower decked, That soup of barley, turnips, beans and peas A11 sweet reminders of some meal gone by. Hail soup, all hail ! Charles, pass the crackers please ! GOUCHER DICTIONARY For the benefit of all Goucher students the following ready reference list of facts is offered. The long-felt need of such a list has been apparent, and we hope the fruits of our labor Will fill the want of a long suffering humanity. In compiling this valuable work, the publishers acknowledge themselves indebted to Erasmus Hinkersnickle, Jr., Esq., R. S. T., and to Zelsiah Uriah Corntassle, Mus. P. I. L. L. Should there be any suggestions or corrections, the publishers would be glad to use such in the next edition. Baltimore, February 29th, 1913. LADIES HOME JOURNALePrimary source of information for R. STUDENTS ORGANIZATIONeA government by geese. ZEDEKIAH-One of the leaders of the Four Hundred. FRINGE OF CONSCIOUSNEss-A ticklish proposition in U1. WOMAN SUFFRAGEeA subject never mentioned in T1. SQUELCH SOCIETIESeA band of noble martyrs whose mission in life is to educate the mob to repress their curiosity. SgeA grilling mind process. The work they do is second only to that of the faculty. A TEA-A means of bringing together a bunch of uncongenial people. THE EIGHT O'CLOCK CLASS tA 12010ng to Omar Khayyami Wake, for the hell that scattered into flight The dreams that cheered me through the winter's night Drives sleep and dreams away from me, and I Must rise and dress me in the dim twilight. A scrap of bacon underdone and tough, A soggy roll, the cook is in a huff, A cup of coffee, pale and weak as I, lTis alleHeaven grant it be enough. Look at the smiling prof before us, 10 llWhy, questions he, Hat eight do you hate to come? At oncelthe recitation welll begin, Pray cheerlul seem, and not so pale and glum I ll QUESTION IN ANATOMY Listen, listen my children! Herels a joke for you to crack. Why does a chicken at Goucher Have nothing but wings and back? ttFAT. A DIRGE HEat, drink and be merry, tomorrow we diet - A wailing sad to hear,7 We never can find one short moment of quiet, Please give us a word of cheerfl HCam you tell me, my friend, what to do to get thin, Asks a mammoth with visage sad, HWhy I eat all I want, and Ilve no double chin, Abstaining is only a fad.H The next one she asks says HRoll on the floor, And donlt sleep as much as you'd like, Why don't you try shutting yourself in the door? It has made me as thin as a spike. ,, HYou canlt eat potatoes, or candy. or cake, For goodness sake never touch meat, Stand up after meals ttill your bones fairly ache, Remember: eat nothing thatls sweet. HTake boiling hot baths and just melt it away, Try freezing yourself with ice, Donlt eat more than one piece of dry toast 3 day, Drink a cupful of vinegar twice. Therets no use your striving at this and at that, Youlll never get rid of that chin, The only way I know of not to be fat, 15 to be born just naturally thin. 186 REFLECTIONS FROM THE POETS ON THE DAY OF JUBILEE When I survey this faculty Let Tommy beat the bass drum As kindly as I can, And Charlie play the flute, I think as did a poet once, While Drs. Welsh and Williams, What man has made of man. Sing sweetly to the lute. When I survey the students here When all the money's garnered As sweetly as I dare, And campaign funds are raised, I think as did a poet once, Then with this band enchanting, What waste on desert air! Weill raise a psalm of praise. l ' 3 I l ,1' Gauch -cT . Tlm steam louv'l'eeu MIDYEAR'S UWhy is de students crowdiny so? inquired the dusting maid. HMidyearls has just been posted up,H the blackboard-cleaner said. HAnd ainlt de students glad of dat? inquired the dusting maid. HYou bet dey ainit, you bet dey ainlt, the blackboard-cleaner said. HIdle students grabs up bookSwdey goes to craminl like deyys mad, Anl de finest kind ob students looks a leetle pale and sad, An, p'fessuhs is de only folks wlat seems uncommon glad, When de Midyearls has been posted in de mawninl.H ilAn' after Midyearls wiat comes next? inquired the dusting maidl t'Dey gits de graded papuhs back? the blackboard-cleaner said. nAn' ainlt de students glad of dat? inquired the dusting maid. HIt all depends, it all depends,ly the blackboard-cleaner said. HSome will git a booby-prize, and must repeat de colse, you see; Some will git a puny pass-mark, some will git a proud P. C., An, some seniors starts to savinY for to buy a golden key, When plfessuhs gives de grades back in de mawniny. 187 A SESSION OF THE FACULTY GYM CLASS Whistle blows. All the members of the Class file in and take their places. Miss Kallman, hurry- ing in, is stopped by Miss Keller. Miss Keller-Miss Kallman, did you whistle? Miss Kallman gives Miss Keller a stony stare and walks to the front of the room. Miss Kallman-A - a - - a - - a - teutlzou! Each one straightens up with eyes glued on Miss Kallman. Miss kiallmtmeLef, foot in place rest. She calls rollJ Miss KallmanwDr. Abel, Why haven't you the regulation blouse? Put your middy blouse inside your bloomers! Miss Bacon, if you can,t stand up any better than that you will have to take special yimnasium to correct those shoulders. That is anul. Who is your partner? Miss Baanr-Dr. Thomas, but,e a XVlz'ss Kallman-Well, please stand together. I think Dr. Thomas will also have to take special yim to straighten his shoulders. Dr. Thomas-Now, Miss Kallman, that isnlt exactly fair. I think you should take a vote to see how many agree to our taking special gymnastics. Miss Kallmane-That is all foolishness. All you have to do is to carry your satchel in your other hand. Now for the lesson. What is the matter at the head of the room? Here, there, Dr. Abel, why are you front with Dr. Keller? Why do you not stand according to your tallness? I wish you would not try to lead this class. Go back and take your place with Dr. Blackshear. . Dr. Aug! Hooking very demureleOh, Dr. Blackshear and I have found it an utter impossibility to march together. His steps are not half firm enough. But I shall do it, for I am noted for doing and making others do the impossible. I must keep to my reputation, by all means. tDr. Welch strides across the floor with one hand on her hip and the other placed on her foreheadJ Miss KallmaneDr. Welch, you lose your credit for coming late, donlt you know that? Dr. Welctht seems to me I ought to know it. Why do you think that I am the one Who gives excuses? I never have'llacked anything and one thing certain I know I donlt lack-good sense. Well, that is all apropos of why I came late. No use talking about getting money as long as the men are the ones who make it. But well see Goucher through if it takes all my energy to do it. Thatls all, Miss Kallmau, don't mind me, just you go right straight ahead. tMiss Keller, during Dr. Welchls harangue, has been pinching Dr. Hopkins and raising a general disturbance which Miss Kallman stops with a reproviug glance and wordd IViss KallmzmmFirst, to-day, we'll have standing on the head. Run to stall-barSmfront side to! Bend over; put your head in the floor! Grasp with tlumbs this side and put your feet up on the bars! Dr. Abel can't you get up? I guess you cannot do it. Come down slowly-put benches back on the wall and run back to your places! Now we will take a few steps in a Swedish dance. Please give strict attention While I show you. tMiss Kallman takes a few fancy steps and stops to see Dr. Van Meter blinking in utter amazementJ Dr. Van Meter-Miss Kallman, please explain how you do that, for I have never used my feet in that way. Miss Kallmaanell, you watch the others and maybe you will learn. Suppose Miss Tupper and Mr. Gay start off. , tMiss Tupper, smiling as usual, and Mr. Gay, blushing, come forward and do their bestJ zWiss Kallman-That will dOethe next two-Dr. Keller and Dr. Hopkins. tDr. Hopkins trips over Miss Kellerls feet and stops the dance to bow profoundly and ask her pardon. Dr. Keller gives a sarcastic reply Which bewilders Dr. Hopkins to such an extent that he becomes confused and forgets the stesz 188 Miss Kallman-Goodness, Dr. Hopkins, you will have to stay after class to practise that. Dr. Keller beats you all to pieces. tAt this moment a couple whirls past Miss Kallman and she can hardly recognize them at the rate at which they are goingJ Miss Kallmmz-Dr. Rede, what do you mean by doing the dance out of your turn P Besides, it ian so fast. Please do as much as I teach you and no more. Miss Williams isn't your right partner anyway. Dr. Lord is. Why donlt you dance with her? Dr. RedemOh, I am, but Miss Williams was just showing Dr. Lord how to do it. You know she can dance in five different languages. Miss Kallman-We all know Miss Williams is very-how do you say?-accomplished; but this is not the place for that, so both of you go back. tDr. Rede goes to claim Dr. Lord as his partner and to his astonishment finds her dancing with Dr. Van MeterJ Miss Kallman-Now, well all do it once more. Everybody get it right this time. tAll danceJ That was good. Miss T upper-Oh, Miss Kallman, let us do the Boston-I,m used to that. Miss Kallman-No; now I'm going to see what you really can do. Please all think of what you can do best and when your name is called tell me what it is. Dr. AanmPut the basket-ball in the basket. Dr. E.MWellmer-it seems to me now that Dr. Abel has mentioned putting the ball in the basket, so to speak, that that was always my favorite game when a boy, but, of course, as that has been some years past, I am afraid to say how prolicient I am in the art. If you don't mind I shall practise a little to be sure and then give a most accurate report. Miss T .-Anything that requires talking. That is my favorite exercise. Miss W. Cvery modestl -Il uly a pas de quoi. Miss Kallmtmmjust mention something. Miss VVmOh, I suppose you have a discus? No? I hope you have heard of discus throwing. The early Greeks - Miss K.-That will do, Miss Williams. Miss Keller. Miss KellePMine is quite original. I can move my lips With my teeth closed. This year I talk in that fashion most of the time. Dr. Rede-I talk steadily for one hour each day, my eyes fixed upon the ceiling. Dr. T lzomas-Mine is a very simple exercise and one I use daily. I thrust my right hand through my coat and stand and talk for hours. I also take arm movements by massaging my head. Dr. H. tbowing to the floorlr-I have just illustrated my favorite exercise, and you can see for yourself. Mr. Gayml use my hand to rub the hair off my forehead. I also use arm rotation in pulling down my cuffs. Dr. Lord tquite proud of herseleEVery day I go in swimming. It is so refreshing. Dr. Vanr-I donlt believe in all this exercise. I didnlt have it when I was a boy and I have pretty good health. Ask Dr. Welch what she does. Dr. WelclzmMy exercise consists in walking. I am out to get that money. But I - Miss K. tsighingl-Excuse me, Dr. Welch, but tell that some other day, will you. It is time for the bell. A - - - a - - teuchou! Thatls all for today! A ll-Good-bye I Dr. Abel and Dr. Williams come for your swimming lesson at four olclock. 189 A HNayP, BALLAD OF YE GREAT UNKNOWN On Hallowelen. that merry feast, The Eve of All Good Saints, When ghosties rise and walk about, Awailing their complaints. There was a goodly company In Vingolf gathered, Such jollity-ye may not knone For care-for woe had Hed. The clowns were prancing all about, The band was playing loud, The dancers-they had come and gone tMidst plaudits from the crowd. HOh, see ! Ye merry maidens. Look! That hgure tall and straight In midnight robesewith painted mask, With slow and solemn gait. It enters,euow it sits. A hush Falls oler the throng-ing room ; The blast that rattles at the panes Is chilly as the tomb. Oh, cometh it from Fensal? ll HN0, no! From Glitner drearl llWell, then whence! l, A sudden thoughte It fills their hearts with feare HPerchance, perhapSesome daring man Disguisedehas ventured here! The company was all aghast,e The music, it was still, No time for thisiwhile such a dread Their leaping hearts did fill. And thus the evening passed away, Nor could their ice cream cones Dispell the thought-the frost that chilled The marrows of their bones. Yet, gentles, do not be alarmed, Nor even anxious be, They soon regained their spirits when They found ltwaSeonly me! Mn samL'u. rnAr-Aplwnerv ...,N.Y nAuerB 190 A couple one Sunday in May, Went hunting for nuts all the day ; Though the weather was hot To be cool was their lot, For you see, a nut-Sundae had they. i ll i ll lg? n. In- .. 9-H, Jug. Showing m- g ..- mmmm, ,1 u. A QUESTION FOR T1 I wish I were in demand! Because Ilm only a fly, Why does no one here love me, Or welcome me in the supply? OH. WHAT NOBLE CHARACTERS ARE THESE! RUTH ANDERSON-Her ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths are peace, ELINOR ANNANeI have my share of common-sense but no imagination. FLORENCE BALDWIN-I lay me down in peace to sleep. HILDA BEGGs-Thou art far too sensible. KATHERINE BOBLITz-Then she will talk, ye gods, how she will talk! WINIFRED BROWNwTause Iis wicked. I is. Is mighty wicked anyhow. I canlt help it. MARGARET BUSWELL:AS good as a play. EVA CANOLE5:TO Speak in Latin was her wont. ETHEL DALE-Let me have men about me. NELLIE DAVIS-She revels in her Ciceronian glory. FLORENCE DAVISON-As merry as the day is long. ANNA DICKEY-The marvels which her pen has Enotl wrought. MARION EVANSwPersuasion tips her tongue, wheneier she talks. ELIZABETH F ENDERICH-Of these am I who thy protection claim. ISABEL FITZPATRICK-eFull lange were her legges and full lean. JEAN FULTON 'Y011 would scarce expect one of my age to speak in public on the stage. ETHEL GROSSCUPwMy strength is as the strength of ten. EDYTHE HANZSCHEwI would rather excel others in knowledge than in power. ALEDA HIER-This nymph, to the destruction of mankind, nourished two locks. JANE HOOPER- -Fain would I climb, but that I fear to fall. MARGUERITE HOPPEeShe could wisely tell what hour of day the clock struck by algebra. MARION IANNEY-Pipe, cat! dance, mouse! well have a dissection at Marion's house. HELEN KEEVERwBesides, she was a shrewd philosopher. MIRIAM KENNELLYwiCh in her colors, richer in her thought. HESTER KING-She doth indeed show some sparks of wit. ELIZABETH LACEY-The lunatic, the lover and the poet. DELPHINE LANNING-And there was no one nowhere so Virtuous. ELIZABETH LONG-Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well. GENEVIEVE MCCOSH-I am enthusiastic over air and words. FRIEDA MANDELSTAMMeThose dark eyes-so dark and so deep. EDITH MCDOWELIr-She gave a friendly hand and a kindly aid to all. MARGARET MACROBERTSwIn her experience all her friends rely. MARGARET MARTSOLF-Steady work turns genius to a loom. ELIZABETH MASON I am the very pink of courtesy. SARA MASON-Oh ! I am stabbed with laughter. CLARINDA MATHEws-Thy voice is heard through rolling drums. LENORE MEIDeInquiring tireless, seeking what is yet unfound. ETHEL MILLEReA flying charm of blushes oier this cheek. RAY MOWBRAY-Full of unconquerable energies. EDITH OSTERSTOCKeWe grant although she has much wit, she is very shy of using it. ALICE OWENs-Wel coulde she syng and lustily, none half so wel and semely. HELEN PECKwSo unaffected, so composed am I. MARION REID-Oh, lassie, art thou sleeping yet? ISABEL ROCKweLL-None but myself can be my parallel. IRENE RoE-tTo S. MJ. Lets go hand in handenot one before another. 191 RUTH ROGERSwI think thou wouldst fathom life too far. EDNA RoTHHOLZ-Do good by stealth and blush to find it fame. BLANCHE Ross-Be not self-willed, thou art much too fair. GRACE RIDDLEwHer lively looks a bright mind disclose. MARGERY SAWYERwaifter than arrow from Tartafs bow. EDNA SCHWARTz-We would not laugh, but when you laugh we must. CAROLINE SINCLAIR-It is better to wear out than to rust out. BESSIE SINDLER-I would the gods had made thee poetical. HAZEL SMITHwHer voice was ever soft, gentle, and low. PHGEBE STONE-What, are the ladies of your land so tall? MATILDA SPARKSeeThou smilest and art silent. ELINOR SPICKNALL-I love to hear thine earnest voice. MIRIAM STROUSE-A penny for your thoughts. MADGE THURLow-Launch not beyond your depth but be discreet. RUTH TINGLEY-The poet, to whose humble heart, heaven doth a quicker pulse impart. FANNIE UPHAMwAppetite comes with eating. DOROTHY WILSON-Oh banish care! such ever be the motto of thy revelry. ISABEL WOODS-Itll not budge an inch. STANLEYETTA WOOLEDGEwCourteous though coy, and gentle though retired. MARGUERITE ZOUCK-In framing an artist, art hath thus decreed, to make some good, but others to exceed. DONNYBROOK BOARD WHEN THEIR PRODUCTIONS WENT TO PRESS Editor-in-Clziqf . A RAVING MANIAC Art Editor . . . . Assistant A rt Editor . Buxz'nes: Manager . Assistant Business Manager Assistanl Business lVltmager Literary Edilor . Assistant Literary Editor Club Editor . Class Editor A thirtic Editor fake Editor . . A MARTYR-TO-ZEAL . MENTALLY JAGGED . BANKRUPT . FEARFULLY IN DEBT . IN ASSETS WANTING . WISHES ARTICLES BACK . GLOOMILY .RESIGNED . JUST FRANTIC . EXCEEDINGLY MISERABLE . CANDIDLY MAD THRU . EXTREMELY M O URNFUL GOUCHER ALPHABET gegggwgl GOUCHER ALPHABET. Our A lplmht is very queer- To Freshmen we explain Its letters stand for subjects here Whose points we needs must gain. Q Means not apple but Latin to us, It causes much weariment, labor and fuss. B Stands for Greek? ,Tis no wonder Pm sure That only one girl the course can en- dure. C Is for French, and Italian is D And Shef is the head of both, is he! 195 GOUCHER ALPHABET E 15 110 more, but in days long gone by It did stand for Spanisheno one knows Why. LODkl'hg F07 LE F You never could guess, gewiss Till we say our Hans is the head of this. G Stands for English, but Baby Gay, too, So I quite like the letter in this case, dontt you? p- - H Is a subject Which moves us to wrath, E7 a KEV That big, that solid, that horrible math? mg A 196 GOUCHER ALPHABET L Rhyme fails us See ttRe-Morseh It,s not Hchemical affinity that unites these two here, For this friendship has lasted since Freshman year. O Stands for ology, P bi, ge and 200 But what the dickens Q are P and Q? R Stands for much in this strange alphabet For cats and for dogs and for Sophomores who fret. 197 GOUCHER ALPHABET S Is for History, course thatls just rippinl Can even evolve an empire from a Pippin. T Is for EC, and for SuEragettes, too, T 0mmy converts all before he gets thru. l zQ U Is Philosophy, Skyward directed, R g Straight into space is all discourse projected. 198 GOUCHER ALPHABET V Teaches us of T iglath Pileser And Jezebel, too, with Elijah to tease 7er. Mid-years in art were really a scream Everyone laughed, and then sat there to dream. Z This may not look much like gym to you But if you went there you could do it, too. 199 Before you,ve seen our college .fairs. Now we have more to show. The world of business with its wares. We would reveal before you go. I T GOUCHER COLLEGE IFOR WOMENJ BALTIMORE, MARYLAND The Twenty-fifth Session will begin on September 15, 191 3. Examinations in June and September. The June examinations will be conducted by the College Entrance Examination Board. The September examinations Will be given by the Examiners of the College beginning on September 15. F ifteen units are needed for unconditional admission. Seven and one-half of these are required, Viz: Latin t2 unitsT, English, Algebra. Plane Geometry; seven and one-half may be elected from the following subjects: Latin tzh unitsT, Greek, French, German, History, Solid Geometry, Plane Trigonometry, Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology. Graduates of good four-year high schools, or of other schools of equivalent grade, should be able to pass these examinations. Certificates are accepted from previously accredited schools. For further information address THE REGISTRAR .JXXNIXIXJSE! i1 BERGER BOOK CO. COLLEGE TEXT- BOOKS Q The text-book expense of an edu- cation can be reduced considerably by ordering your books from us 308 NORTH CHARLES STREET LI! Ll3Ll+3J,L'-.3LLIEJ;I?J,LI3Ll3Jil-3LliMM!!!L'ELIQLIELgLLEJJ 1 , '+'2.+' m9w +m -o.+.-.,+... IE 0 Ilium SW nmommmou 515, BALTIMORE. m Where are you going, my pretty maid? Pm going a-shopping, sir, she said. What will you buy, my pretty maid? 0h, all sorts of things, kind sir, she said. A bonnet, a gown, a suit of blue linen, Some handkerchiefs, collars,-a pair of gloves, too A pair of tan pumps, and an alcohol lamp And-so many things, I will never get through. So many stores must you visit, sweet maid. P11 visit but one, kind sir, she said. And whose Will that be, my pretty maid? P11 find all at Stewartls, kind sir, she said. The photographs in the 1913:1914 issue of DONNYBROOK FAIR are made by The Bachrach Studios, 16 West Lexington Street. We Shall be glad to give to all students of GOUCHER COLLEGE the same low rates that we give to the members of the Senior Class. THE BACHRACH STUDIOS 16 WEST LEXINGTON STREET THE NATIONAL EXCHANGE BANK OF BALTIMORE Hopkins Place, German and Liberty Streets CAPITAL, $1,000,000 SURPLUS AND EARNINGS, $74!,000 December 31, 1912 OFFICERS WALDO NEWCOMER, President SUMMERFIELD BALDWIN. Vicz-Przsidem R. VINTON LANSDALE. Cashier CLINTON G. MORGAN, Asst. Cashier FOREIGN EXCHANGE LETTERS OF CREDIT ACCOUNTS INVITED SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES EUTAW SAVINGS BANK OF BALTIMORE S. W. Corner Eutaw and Fayette Streets JANUARY 1, I913 Funds, $26,927,453.35 Accounfs, 45 ,021 OPEN, 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. INTEREST: SATURDAYS, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. 3i Per Cent. per Annum ONE DOLLAR WILL OPEN AN ACCOUNT Memorandum packaga sent to any Fraternity member through theSecretatv of the Chapter A. H. FETTING Manufacturer of Greek Letter Fraternity Jewelry 213 NORTH LIBERTY STREET BALTIMORE, MD. Special Designs and Estimates Fumisbea' on Class Pins, Medals, Rings, etc. Condensed Statement of the Condition of the Merchants:Mechanics National Bank At close of business JANUARY 2nd, 1913 Resources Liabilities Loans and Discounts ................ $14,451,786.21 Capital Stock ................... $ 2,000,000 00 U. S. Bonds and Premiums . . . ....... 1,792,800.55 Surplus . . ................ . . 2,000,000.00 Other Bonds and Investments ............ 1,065,617.06 Undivided Profits. . . . ..... . 173,936.35 Banking House ........... 400,000.00 Circulation ............. 1,511,600.00 Other Real Estate .......... 400,000.00 Bonds Borrowed . . . . . . . . . . 50,000 0 Due from U. S. Treasurer ............. 15,000.00 Deposits ..................... 21,670,25609 Five per cent Fund ................ 81,350.00 Due from Reserve Agents ............. 1,486,316.43 Due from Other Banks .............. 2,547,084.43 Cash ........................ 5,165,837.76 777 $27.405,792.44 $27,405,792.44 DIRECTORS Douglas H. Thomas Geo. C. J enkins Summerfield Baldwin, Jr. Lawrason Riggs J ames L. Sellman John B. Ramsay D. D. Mallory E. B. Hunting Austin McLanahan Sam'l C. Rowland Francis E. Waters J ohn S. Gittings W. Bladen Lowndes Morris Whitridge William Ingle Alexander Brown Miles White. Jr. Jere H. Wheelwright Seymour Mandelbaum J. C. Fenhagen Chas. A. Webb Geo. K. McGaw David Hutzler W. S. Hilles Wm. Wallace Lanahan OFFICERS Jm- K- Shaw DOUGLAS H. THOMAS, President J OHN B. RAMSAY, Vice-Pres. and Chairman of Board of Directors WILLIAM INGLE, Vice-President JOHN B. H. DUNN, Cashier CHARLES HANN, Assft Cash. J. CLEVELAND WANDS, Ass't Cash. ROBERT A. WELSH, Asstt Cash. Accounts of Corporations, Firms and Individuals are respectfully solicited. We want your business, whether large or small, and you are most cordially invlted to call or write. A Treacherous Memory often gives you much discomfort when you realize that your insurance policies or other valuable papers are lost. Faulty memory, carelessness of clerks, fire, theft and dishonesty may result in loss some day of valuable documents, securities, contracts, jewels or other valuables. Why should you take the risk? A Safe Deposit Box secure, convenient, watched day and night, can be secured for a small amount. MARYLAND TRUST COMPANY N. W. Cor. Calvert 6': German Sts. BALTIMORE, MD. OFFICERS L. S. ZIMMERMAN, President OSCAR G. MURRAY, lst Vice-President CARROLL VAN NESS, 2nd Vice-President JERVIS SPENCER, Jr., Secretary-Treasurer IVAN SKINNER, Assistant Secretary-Treasurer That Certain Something About JOEL GUTMAN ca, Co. FEMININE FASHIONS Is f1Personali ty To attain this personality has required something much more than our long exper- ience-PERSONAL contact with the fashion designers, PERSONAL study of the modes, PER- SONAL information from our Paris and London Bureaus, PERSONAL judgment ta sixth sense that our fashion-experts seem to possessi and PERSONAL catering to YOUR requirements. . Without doubt, to this personale1ement in our styles and service tand our always fair pr1ces0 can be ascrlbed the popularlty of this store with college women who desire to spend their allowance to the BEST ADVANTAGE. JOEL GUTMAN C$, COMPANY, North Eutaw Street, Baltimore, Maryland. Make with Crisco Cakes Pies Cookies Biscuits Rolls Muffins Doughnuts Gingerbread and you will discover that you actually can get better results with Crisco than with butter. You will secure wholesome, delicate and dainty foods which have a finer Havor than you ever have been able to obtain before. Crisco, since it contains no water, has so much more shortening value than butter, that the improvement it makes m pastries is really wonderful. M E a 3 v: a: ,, rtenlng . Sold in 25c packages by all grocers $uvw,fg A Twist of the Button . a . Fills the Pen It's as Easy as Winding Your Watch FOR years the A A self-filler has been giving Universal Satisfaction. It is the one pen which is always ready for service. Can be filled from an ink stand or bottle and will not leak or blot. Equipped with the A A Clip, which excels by far any fountain pen clip yet produced, these pens make serviceable, attractive and appropriate gifts. Our pens are made entirely in our own factory from the best known mate- rials. Their workmanship is the most scientific and skilful that experienced, high priced workmen can produce. Every pen is fully guaranteed Arthur A. Waterman 8: Company 22 Thames Street, New York City Not connected with the L. E. Waterman Co. HIGHTSTOWN AXMINSTER RUGS Furnish Homes Beautifully Moderate Prices Enquire of Your Dealer J. V. DAVISON, Manufacturer mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmg mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm E Capital, $600,000 Chartered in 1864 Surplus and Profits, $2,370,564 a SAFE DFPOSIT AND TRUST COMPANY x 1 L L OF BALTIMORE a OFFICERS Michael Jenkins ......... . . . . Presidmt H4 H. M. Lee ............... Scurtary H. Walters ............. V ice-Presideut Arthur C. Gibson ........ Assixlanl Srcwtam' J. XV. Marshall ........ , . 3d Vtk'a-Prz'sidnzt Joseph B. Kirby . . ...... Assixlanl Srrrvlm-y J. J. Nelligan ............. 1d Vich'Esizz'enl Vth R. Hubner ......... Axxistlmt Scrar'lam' Andrew P. Spamer ............. Ti'mxmrr George R Tudor ............ . Caxln'rr Geo. B. Gammic ......... Amistaul Trmwrrr A. P. Strobel . h . ....... Rm! 153mm Offimr DIRECTthS Michael Jenkins Samhl M. Shoemaker Douglas H. Thomas Isaac M. Cate H. Walters Blanchard Randall Norman James John W. Marshall Waldo Newcomer E. H, Perkins John J. Nelligan Robert Garrett E Established for the Settlement of Estates, Execution of Trusts and the Safenkeeping of Securities and a E Valuables and the Renting of Private Safes in its Indestructible Vaults g ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmg Central Savings Bank of Baltimore Southeast Corner Charles and Lexington Streets Incorporated 18 54 Robert K. Waring ....... President VVilton Snowden . . . Vice-President J. Wilson Cole ...... . . Treasurer James D. Garrett Assist. Treasurer DIRECTORS Wilton Snowden Franklin P. Cator Thomas E. Cottman Robert K. Waring John S. Gibbs Charles Willms Edward B. Owens C. Morton Stewart, Jr. Edward P. ?vi11 Miles White. Jr. Charles T. Crane W. Champlin Robinson Henry Williams Gaorge W. Corner, Jr. Eli Oppenheim Edwin Warfield John K. Shaw John Wesley Brown William Winchester Thomas Foley Hisky J. Wilson Cole William H. Grafflin Edwin G. Baetjer Harry G. Evans Counselor, Arthur George Brown Convenient Hours: DAILY. 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. SATURDAY. 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. From july 15! to September Ijth Bank closes ' ' HWMMWX We 80th Your Patronage Made for Particular Housekeepers Patapsco Superlative Flour C. A. Gambrill Mfg. Company Baltimore, Md., U. S. A. As Roszel Cathcart Established 1874 Edgar H. Donaldson Telephone: C. 8: 13.. St. Paul 976 A. Roszel Cathcart 8: C0. General Insurance Agents and Brokers Abell Building, Baltimore and South Streets, Baltimore, Md. Reprmnting the following weII-lmown companies: NEW YORK UNDERWRITERS AGENCY ORIENT INSURANCE CO. OF CONNECTICUT Insurand of every description placed at All businus intrusted to us will receive prompt lowest current rate: and careful attention Your Business Solicited Established 1857 HennegensBates Company Jewelers and Silversmiths Diamond Merchants Hall Clocks, Mahogany and Crystal Clocks Silver, Bronze and Pewter Prize Trophies for College Events Agents for the Celebrated Rookwood Pottery 7 EAST BALTIMORE STREET Why Your Skin Needs Resinol Soap HEN you wash your face, do you realize that it is not enough to remove the dirtrithat your skin needs a soothing, healing inHuence to keep your complexion fresh, fair and free from blemish? Ordinary toilet soaps only clean the skin. At best, they can not heal or protect it. They may even injure it with the alkali they contain. Resinol Soap, besides being a perfectly pure toilet soap, contains the same medication as Resinol Ointment which doctors have ' prescribed for 18 years for skin diseases. That is why Resinol Soap does for the complexion what cosmetics are supposed to do. You should know Resinol Soap. Resinol Chemical Co., Baltimore Reserved .9! V. ., ,. ,V e.tmmmwmmw, WWI FALVJL JMKVJL 113?!le Queen of Sea Routes Merchants 8: Miners Transportation Co. , IE s'rEAMSI-IIP LINES IQ r- between .4: rw BALTIMORE and BOSTON E; .1 BALTIMORE and PROVIDENCE BALTIMORE, NEWPORT NEWS and NORFOLK BALTIMORE, SAVANNAH and JACKSONVILLE PHILADELPHIA and BOSTON PHILADELPHIA, SAVANNAH and JACKSONVILLE ammm 0 3' 3040 Through tickets to principal points including meals and stateroom accommodations. Fine steamers; best service; low fares: staterooms De Luxe; baths. Wireless telegraph. Send for booklet. W. P. Turner, Passenger Traffic Manager General Offices, Light and German Streets, Baltimore, Md. mo iffy! U3 Finest Coastwise Trips in the Wor1d $2I H. E. BOSLEY HOTEL PHARMACIST R EN N ERT Succeswr to J 05mm B. HALL BALTIMORE Charles and Twenty-Second Streets Famous Cuisine Drugs, Chemicals, Perfumery, Candy Stationary and Toilet Articles Always on Hand ROOMS Prescriptions a Specialty $1.00 Per Day and Upward $2.00 Per Day and Upward With Bath NIGHT BELL ANSWERED PROMPTLY C. 5: P. Phone, Mt. Vernon 6510 c. amphonel Mt, mm, 168, Centrally located Edward Dams, Manager MILLER BROTHERS Successors m A. RUPERTI CO. Bookbinders and Printers Artistic Bindings in all Shades and Grades of Leather. Attention given to Rare Bindings. New Location 326 W. Franklin Street Formerly of 238 PARK AVENUE MATERIALS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR GRADUATION DRESSES 9 ' I EMPORIUM All that is new, fashionable and dependable IN SUITS, WRAPS. WAISTS, SILKS DRESS GOODS, LACES LADIESy SHOES, MILLINERY UNDERWEAR, NECK FIXINGS, GLOVES Don't forget that pictures on your walls are witnesses for or against you. A man's character is written not only in his face, but all over his house Purnellts 224 N. Howard Street . Picture Merchants We cordially invite a visit to our gallery, which contains the inostlcomprehensive and the choicest collection of Art to be seen ocal y. As soon as published the best things from London, Berlin and Paris may be seen here. Frequent visits will help to give one a liberal education in art. Let us remind you that we frame Pictures; frame them cor- rectly and artistically. Our large and varied experience, expert knowledge. artistic sense and feeling combined with the most modern and best mechanical equipment insure the most pleasing and satisfying results and the most moderate cost. Parnell Art Company 224 N. Howard Street THE PHOTOGRAPHS of the plays illustrated in this book were made by J. H. Schaefer 8: Son 887 W. Baltimore St. Telephone Connections Established 1810 Andrew C. Snyder Pork Packer Manufacturer of The Celebrated Snyderhs Sausage and Refiner Your patronage solicited and Satisfaction Guaranteed Tall Brothers Stationers Printers, Engravers BLANK BOOK MAKERS 119 Light Street Baltimore, Md. Frederick Allen Hanzsche FIRST CLASS PRINTING Our Work is Up to Date Oar cPrices are 130mm to wate 419 N. Howard St. BALTIMORE, MD. TeIephonz Mt. Vernon, 4976-Y A. T. Jones 8: Sons ?Ehe $altimare Qtostumers Formerly 413 E. Baltimore Sr. No. 823 N. Howard Street 000 Costumes for NIask Balls, Operas, Plays. Tableaux, etc. Full Dress and Tuxedo Suits for Hire Oxford Caps and Gowns HOTEL RICHMOND W. H. GROSSCUP, PROPRIETOR 70 AND 72 WEST 46TH STREET NEAR 5TH AVENUE NEW YORK TELEPHONE 8216 BRYANT THE MARYLAND SCHOOL FOR THE BLIND OVERLEA, MARYLAND FOR ALL BLIND OR WITH DEFECTIVE SIGHT ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO JOHN F. BLEDSOE. SUPERINTENDENT THE HANDICRAFT SHOP 523 N. Charles St, Baltimore Articles of Beauty and Individuality for Graduation Presents. Wedding Gifts and Personal Use Orders taken for Illuminating, Book, binding, Class Rings. Pins, etc. Handwrought Siiver, Jewelry. Basketry, Pottery, Carving, Photographs, Prints SORORITY CLASS and CLUB PINS and RINGS Official for Delta Gamma BUNDE 8: UPMEYER C0. Mmzufaciurmg jewelers MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN ALWAYS THE BEST Dunnk MANUFACTURING RETAILERS Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases and Leather Goods 'F xvo Big Stores 27 W. BAL'PIMOIZE S'FREE F Near Hanover 307 N. CALVERT STREET Near Saratoga F. R. BATCHELOR C. L. BATCHELOR C. P. PHONE Frank R. Batchelor 8: Son Produce and Fruit cDealers Stall 891, Lexington Street near Eutaw Special attention given phone and mail orders. Daily in attendance. We deliver anywhere. Clark 8:1Company QED: Iimn gm: LINENS WHITE GOODS HANDKERCHIEFS LACES DRESS GOODS THE KING 'Failored Waist sold exclusively by us in Baltimore 334 N. Charles Street C. P. Phone: Washington Branch: Gilmor 1247 910 14th Street, N. W. H. FRIEDMAN Ladiey Tailor 232234 N. Gilmor Street BALTIMORE, MD. James W. Hughes CATERER 12 EAST CENTRE STREET BALTIMORE, MD. Banquets, Weddings. Receptions. Dinners and Parties Served VVith Every Requisite ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED T0 John W. Mealy 8: Sons Co. Diamond Merchants JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS MAKERS 0F CHAMELRUPAR and Unique Jewelry of the better kind 18 W. Lexington Street BALTIMORE Phone, St. Paul 1174 Fifty-two yearsh experience in the Stationery and Book Business John H. Saumenig 8: C0. 229 Park Avenue Near Saratoga m Stationery, Printing, Binding Wedding Invitations Visiting Cards Monograms Crests Dies Books procured upon special orders for Schools, Colleges and Institutions No One Knows How Long zimhms Will Last- No one has ever seen one worn out. In the seventy-five years of its manufacture it has been recognized-even by the severest critiCSe as the best that human hands could produce. Knabe Players represent the highest develop- ment in player-pianas. Demonstrations daily. KNABE WAREROOMS, Park Ave. and Fayette St, Baltimore The Goucher College Ring A distinct departure from the commonplace in college emblems. Designed by an artist, hand-wrought thruout by artistvcraftsmen. O'NEJ $71 1;. r 0 flair r HHlND 'EMO e Made by The Pond Applied Art Studios 328 N. Charles St, Baltimore, Md. Mt. Vernon 5 73 Roses Carnations Vhiolets J. A. Ritter 8: Son Florzsts and Decorators 1918 N. Charles St. NEAR 20TH Baltimore, N! d. STIEFF PIANOS Meet the Demands GRANDS 0f the PLAYERS or Critical Buyer UPRIGHTS CHAS. M. STIEFF ESTABLISHED 1842 9 N. Liberty St. Baltimore, Md. -BOOKS- V E carry in stock the latest books of eminent authors as well as standard and miscellaneous publications. Orders for any book that may be desired, whether issued from our own press or that of any reputable publishing house. will be promptly tilled. The Methodist Book Concern Publishers 150 Fifth Avenue New York City C. 8L P. Phone, St. Paul 26807172 Miss Livingston SUC CESSOR To Miss Corcoran Slzampoaz'ng, Scalp Treafment, Manz'curz'ng and Faaal Massage Representing MARTHA MATILDA HARPER'S METHOD OF SCALP TREATMENT Rochester. N. Y. 1006-7 Union Trust Building BALTIMORE, MD. 'FOLCHESTER COMPANY'S EXCURSIONS Always the Best TOLCHESTER BEACH PORT DEPOSIT EXCURSIONS WEST RIVER EXCURSIONS DOWN-THE-BAY EXCURSIONS DEVEIIOPING AND PRINTING YOUR KODAK MAN ttSUSSMANh Baltimore, Md. SQGI'IS NHELLNV'I 223,225 Park Ave. COPYING AND ENLAIIt;ING KODAKS AND SUPPLIES Sisco Bros. Goucher Ribbon, Pins, Class Flags Dress Trimmings. Notions Novelties, Banners Badges. Flags 304 North Howard St. Baltimore, Md. It's here! Itts all right! If itts for Sport! If it's here! Basket:ball, Track and Pennants . r H ?llttle oets erM.l'MJ Baltimore, Md. Baltimore and Howard Sts. Robert H. Dew, Secretary Benjamin F. Bennett. IL, Sup't Benimin F. Bennett, Pres't 8: Tleas. 5. Frank Bennett, Vice-Pres't BENJAMIN F. BENNETT BUILDING GU. Cantractors and Builders 123 SOUTH HOWARD STREET BALTIMORE. MD. Telephone St. Paul 5759 ASK for WELSBACH QUALITY, and you will get the BEST MANTELS and GAS LIGHTS made WELSBACH COMPANY 14 N. Charles St. Baltimore, Md. C. 8: P. Phone Mt. Vernon 6494 CHARLES SCHROEDER GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS 4 West Twenty-fourth Street BALTIMORE, MD. EDW. YOUNG, Manager J. S. NOEL, Manager Maryland Pressing Club Sanitary Cleaners and cPressers of Ladia' and Gentlemenls Suits and Garments 1917 North Charles Street Phone 1635 Mt. Vernon W. P. Runyon, Presfzz'rnl C. D. Snedeker, Treasurer Perth Amboy Dry Dock C0. Shipwrights and Caulkers Machinists and Boiler Makers Perth Amboy, N. J. Four Balance Dry Docks 2500, 2000, 1000 and 500 Tons Patent Adjustable Keel Blocks 25 Ton Derrick All Supplies Ample Pier Room l l Perth Amboy No. 6 ThLEPHONES 3 Perth Amboy No. 7 THE ALPHA PHOTO ENGRAVING COMPANY J ARTISTS .193 ENGRAVERS Makers of Printing Plates for all Artistic and Mercantile Purpom N. E. Corner of Howard and Fayette Sts. BALTIMORE MD. Conservatory Peabody of Music BALTIMORE HAROLD RANDOLPH. Director Staff of 60 European and American Masters. ' Highest Artistic Standards. 1T5 Recitation: bytlendina min: free to pupils. 33f ? aw??? h fanc CI. ENDOWMENT ' ligogfomubtchuua. Opera Class. Chow- and tr Itet. MAKES Mulsligf cgzation lrom beginning to completion in POSSIBLE t '3 5. Class and private Imm. Diplomas, Teachers' Certificates awarded. Preparalom Department, MAY G. EVANS. Superintendent 23 E Mt. Vernon Place Tuitinn $20 to $70 Iccordiu to truth And Itndy. Circuhn on requut. BAILEY, BANKS 6c BIDDLE CO. Diamond Merchants, Jewelers Silversmiths Stationers Designers and Makers of COLLEGE and SCHOOL EMBLEMS and NOVELTIES Illustrations and Prices of Class and Fraternity Emblems, Seals, Charms, Plaques, Medals, Souvenir Spoons. etc. mailed upon request. All Emblems are executed in the workshops on the premises, and are of the highest grade of finish and quality. CLASS RINGS Particular attention given to the designing and manufacture of Class Rings. l218-20-22 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA AtSQUA for everybody is the uSpalcling Policy. We guarantee each buyer of an article bearing the 110 EAST BALTIMORE. STREET BALTIMORE RE. DEAL Spalding Trade-Mark that such article will give satisfaction and a reasonable amount of service. Send for our I9I3 Catalogue SUPERIOR OUTER GARMENTS FOR WOMEN AND MISSES UALITY. style and workmanship of the Hutzler standard- that of your better shops at home. SMART FOOTWEAR FASHIONABLE MlLLlNERY FINE GLOVES EXQUISITE LINGERIE WAISTS NECKWEAR HANDKERCHIEFS SILK HOSIERY All these, in the high grade and of the kind most desired by Gaucher College women. HUTZLER BFQTH BRS GE Zl0-218 NORTH HOWARD STREET BALTIMORE New Store The J . S. MacDonald Cqmpany 212 NORTH CHARLES STREET WIDELITY BUILDINCB Diamonds, J ewelry, Watches, Silver- ware, Cut Glass and Objects of Art ooommoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooa New Goods QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOJ Estimates Furnished for Class Pins, Rings and Medals OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWQe E w Cm AGO v M En AEDLUYEV' w ELKHORN CHEESE The Smack 0e Goodness Therees a spicy tang to Elkhorn Pimento Cheese. Made from pure pasteurized milk. Always sold absolutely fresh. Nourishing as meat. Elkhorn Cheese helps digest a. hearty dinner. Try it. 31 Varieties Ask Your Dealer Have your CLEANING and DYEING done by FOOTEReS DYE WORKS Always Safest and Best BALTIMORE BRANCH OFFICES 302 N. Howard Street 342 N. Charles Street 208 W. Lexington Street 1411 N. Charles Street Samuel Feast 8: Sons Cut Flowers and Floral Decomtions 331 and 1408 North Charles Street BALTIMORE Correspondents in Every Large City in the Union L. s. WILLIAMS 6: co. DRUGGISTS St. Paul and 24th Streets, Baltimore, Md. Pure Drugs, Sick-room Requisites, Toilet Articles, etc. Quick Service and Prompt Delivery Mt. Vernon 6498 Mt. Vernon 1729 BALTIMORFJS BEST STORE W W 9 , 6 . HOWARD AND LEXINGTON Spend Your Money is the message of most advertising. This is an invitation to follow the saving habits of suc- cessful men and women. Start an account now in our savings department. T HE CONTINENTAL TRUST COMPANY Capital Resources, $3,750,000 Baltimore and Calvert Streets Hllll INN TO THE APPRECIATIVE BUYERS OF PRINTING THOSE responsible for the product of this firm are working with one purpose in mind, to produce the best and to give the purchaser a little better than he expects. 11 Serious consid- eration is given to correct design, even to the smallest detail. Q Color work and the printing of all styles of halfltones in a particularly line manner is a feature. q The printing of costly books intelligently executed. Q Fully equipped to furnish hand- some volumes to act as sample books for Ink Manufacturers and Paper Mills. 1L An unusual record has been established, and speci- mens will demonstrate readily the degree of perfection reached. NORMAN T. A. MUNDER 8:, CO. 212 GUILFORD AVENUE BALTIMORE Our patrons, who are very critical and exacting, and to whom we might refer, are to be found in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore,Washington, etc. COTRELL 6t LEONARD ALBANY, N. Y. MAKERS OF CAPS, GOWNS AND HOODS Class Contracts :1 Specialty TO THE AMERICAN COLLEGES AND UNIVERSI. TIES FROM THE ATLANTIC TO THE PACIFIC Correct Hoods for All Degrees Rich Robes for Pulpit and Bench Bulletin, Samples, etc. on Request The Young Brides Ally. Culinary inexperience is a formidable handicap to the young bride who has gtarted out to make her husband comfortable and keep him happy. At this critical period blessed is she who can cook. Only when preparing dessert is the housewife with no experience in cook- ing on the same footing as her more accomplished sister. Both using serve the same delicious desserts, their preparation requiring no greater skill than the ability to boil water. They can be made in a minute. Nothing short of magic could produce dishes so delightful and so beautiful from any other material. They are so good that they cover up very agreeably the deficiencies of any dinner. JELL-o costs 10c. at a grocery. The beautiful Recipe Book, DESSERTS OF THE WORLD, illustrated in ten colors and gold, sent tree to all who ask us lor it. THE GENESEE PURE FOOD 00., Le Roy, N. Y., and Bridgeburg, Can. The name JELL-O is on every package in big: red letters. If it isn't there. it isnt JELL-O.
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